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The entire text of this manual is available from the Octave prompt via the command doc. In addition, the documentation for individual user-written functions and variables is also available via the help command. This section describes the commands used for reading the manual and the documentation strings for user-supplied functions and variables. See Function Files, for more information about how to document the functions you write.
--list
.
Display the help text for name. For example, the command
help help prints a short message describing the help
command.
Given the single argument --list
, list all operators,
keywords, built-in functions, and loadable functions available
in the current session of Octave.
Given the single argument .
, list all operators available
in the current session of Octave.
If invoked without any arguments, help
display instructions
on how to access help from the command line.
The help command can give you information about operators, but not the comma and semicolons that are used as command separators. To get help for those, you must type help comma or help semicolon.
Display documentation for the function function_name directly from an online version of the printed manual, using the GNU Info browser. If invoked without any arguments, the manual is shown from the beginning.
For example, the command doc rand starts the GNU Info browser
at the rand
node in the online version of the manual.
Once the GNU Info browser is running, help for using it is available using the command C-h.
See also: help.
Search for the string str in all functions found in the current
function search path. By default, lookfor
searches for str
in the first sentence of the help string of each function found. The entire
help text of each function can be searched if the "-all"
argument is
supplied. All searches are case insensitive.
Called with no output arguments, lookfor
prints the list of
matching functions to the terminal. Otherwise, the output arguments
func and helpstring define the matching functions and the
first sentence of each of their help strings.
The ability of lookfor
to correctly identify the first
sentence of the help text is dependent on the format of the
function’s help. All Octave core functions are correctly
formatted, but the same can not be guaranteed for external packages and
user-supplied functions. Therefore, the use of the "-all"
argument may be necessary to find related functions that are not a part of
Octave.
To see what is new in the current release of Octave, use the news
function.
Display the current NEWS file for Octave or an installed package.
When called without an argument, display the NEWS file for Octave. When given a package name package, display the current NEWS file for that package.
Display contact information for the GNU Octave community.
Describe the conditions for copying and distributing Octave.
The following functions can be used to change which programs are used for displaying the documentation, and where the documentation can be found.
Query or set the internal variable that specifies the name of the
Octave info file. The default value is
octave-home/info/octave.info, in
which octave-home is the root directory of the Octave installation.
The default value may be overridden by the environment variable
OCTAVE_INFO_FILE
, or the command line argument
‘--info-file FNAME’.
When called from inside a function with the "local"
option, the
variable is changed locally for the function and any subroutines it calls.
The original variable value is restored when exiting the function.
See also: info_program, doc, help, makeinfo_program.
Query or set the internal variable that specifies the name of the
info program to run. The default value is
octave-home/libexec/octave/version/exec/arch/info
in which octave-home is the root directory of the Octave installation,
version is the Octave version number, and arch
is the system type (for example, i686-pc-linux-gnu
). The
default value may be overridden by the environment variable
OCTAVE_INFO_PROGRAM
, or the command line argument
‘--info-program NAME’.
When called from inside a function with the "local"
option, the
variable is changed locally for the function and any subroutines it calls.
The original variable value is restored when exiting the function.
See also: info_file, doc, help, makeinfo_program.
Query or set the internal variable that specifies the name of the
program that Octave runs to format help text containing
Texinfo markup commands. The default value is makeinfo
.
When called from inside a function with the "local"
option, the
variable is changed locally for the function and any subroutines it calls.
The original variable value is restored when exiting the function.
See also: texi_macros_file, info_file, info_program, doc, help.
Query or set the internal variable that specifies the name of the
file containing Texinfo macros that are prepended to documentation strings
before they are passed to makeinfo. The default value is
octave-home/share/octave/version/etc/macros.texi,
in which octave-home is the root directory of the Octave installation,
and version is the Octave version number.
The default value may be overridden by the environment variable
OCTAVE_TEXI_MACROS_FILE
, or the command line argument
‘--texi-macros-file FNAME’.
When called from inside a function with the "local"
option, the
variable is changed locally for the function and any subroutines it calls.
The original variable value is restored when exiting the function.
See also: makeinfo_program.
Query or set the internal variable that specifies the name of the
Octave documentation cache file. A cache file significantly improves
the performance of the lookfor
command. The default value is
octave-home/share/octave/version/etc/doc-cache,
in which octave-home is the root directory of the Octave installation,
and version is the Octave version number.
The default value may be overridden by the environment variable
OCTAVE_DOC_CACHE_FILE
, or the command line argument
‘--doc-cache-file FNAME’.
When called from inside a function with the "local"
option, the
variable is changed locally for the function and any subroutines it calls.
The original variable value is restored when exiting the function.
See also: doc_cache_create, lookfor, info_program, doc, help, makeinfo_program.
Query or set the internal variable that specifies the name of the
file containing docstrings for built-in Octave functions.
The default value is
octave-home/share/octave/version/etc/built-in-docstrings,
in which octave-home is the root directory of the Octave installation,
and version is the Octave version number.
The default value may be overridden by the environment variable
OCTAVE_BUILT_IN_DOCSTRINGS_FILE
, or the command line argument
‘--built-in-docstrings-file FNAME’.
Note: This variable is only used when Octave is initializing itself. Modifying it during a running session of Octave will have no effect.
Query or set the internal variable that controls whether Octave
will add additional help information to the end of the output from
the help
command and usage messages for built-in commands.
When called from inside a function with the "local"
option, the
variable is changed locally for the function and any subroutines it calls.
The original variable value is restored when exiting the function.
The following functions are principally used internally by Octave for generating the documentation. They are documented here for completeness and because they may occasionally be useful for users.
Generate documentation caches for all functions in a given directory.
A documentation cache is generated for all functions in directory.
The
resulting cache is saved in the file out_file.
The cache is used to speed up lookfor
.
If no directory is given (or it is the empty matrix), a cache for built-in operators, etc. is generated.
See also: doc_cache_file, lookfor, path.
Return the raw help text of function name.
The raw help text is returned in text and the format in format
The format is a string which is one of "texinfo"
,
"html"
, or "plain text"
.
Return the raw help text from the file fname.
The raw help text is returned in text and the format in format
The format is a string which is one of "texinfo"
,
"html"
, or "plain text"
.
Return the first sentence of a function’s help text.
The first sentence is defined as the text after the function declaration until either the first period (".") or the first appearance of two consecutive newlines ("\n\n"). The text is truncated to a maximum length of max_len, which defaults to 80.
The optional output argument status returns the status reported by
makeinfo
. If only one output argument is requested, and status
is non-zero, a warning is displayed.
As an example, the first sentence of this help text is
get_first_help_sentence ("get_first_help_sentence") -| ans = Return the first sentence of a function's help text.
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