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S-command

 The "S"  command  searches  lines  from the  current  position  to  the
 remainder of the  file for one  or more strings  and displays the  node
 text around the first  line containing a match.   With the "R"  command
 prefix (*Note R:  Regular-Expression-Search), the  strings can  specify
 complex pattern matches instead of ordinary string matches.

 The node containing the  matching line then  becomes the current  node.
 Sometimes you do  not know exactly  what you are  looking for, but  can
 tell from context.  In that case, you can save screen display by  using
 the "K"  (keyword) command  instead (*Note  Keyword:  Keyword-Command),
 because it does not change the  display position in the INFO file,  but
 just types out matching lines.  You  can then issue a more precise  "S"
 command to find the desired line.

 The search  direction can  be specified  by the  "<" and  ">"  commands
 (*Note <: Left-Angle-Command, *Note >: Right-Angle-Command), but if  it
 has never been set, it defaults to forwards through the file.

 String matching is performed on each line separately, so matches cannot
 span line boundaries.   For ordinary  string searches,  letter case  is
 IGNORED in the  search, but  for regular  expression pattern  searches,
 letter case is significant.

 The search strings  follow the  "S" command, and  if more  than one  is
 specified,  they   must   be   separated  by   vertical   bars.    Thus
 "Sone|two|three" will find the  first line containing  at least one  of
 the strings "one",  "two", or  "three".  If you  need to  search for  a
 vertical bar, it can be  "escaped" (turned into an ordinary  character)
 by prefixing it  with an at-sign,  "@".  Thus, "Sone@|two|three"  would
 search for the strings "one|two" and "three".  To get a literal at-sign
 into the search string, you simply escape it: "Sone@@two" searches  for
 the string "one@two".