\dd This defines the overall title of the entire document. This
title is treated specially in some output formats (for example, it's
-used in a \cw{<title>} tag in the HTML output), so it needs a
+used in a \cw{<TITLE>} tag in the HTML output), so it needs a
special paragraph type to point it out.
\dt \i\cw{\\copyright}
configure, and the meaning of the one(s) after that depends on the
first keyword.
-The current list of configuration keywords in the main Halibut code
-is quite small. Here it is in full:
+Each output format supports a range of configuration options of its
+own (and some configuration is shared between similar output formats
+- the PDF and PostScript formats share most of their configuration,
+as described in \k{output-paper}). The configuration keywords for
+each output format are listed in the manual section for that format;
+see \k{output}.
+
+There are also a small number of configuration options which apply
+across all output formats:
\dt \I\cw{\\cfg\{chapter\}}\cw{\\cfg\{chapter\}\{}\e{new chapter name}\cw{\}}
\dd Exactly like \c{chapter}, but changes the name given to
appendices.
+\dt \I\cw{\\cfg\{contents\}}\cw{\\cfg\{contents\}\{}\e{new contents name}\cw{\}}
+
+\dd This changes the name given to the contents section (by default
+\q{Contents}) in back ends which generate one.
+
+\dt \I\cw{\\cfg\{index\}}\cw{\\cfg\{index\}\{}\e{new index name}\cw{\}}
+
+\dd This changes the name given to the index section (by default
+\q{Index}) in back ends which generate one.
+
\dt \I\cw{\\cfg\{input-charset\}}\cw{\\cfg\{input-charset\}\{}\e{character set name}\cw{\}}
\dd This tells Halibut what \i{character set} you are writing your
You can specify any well-known name for any supported character set.
For example, \c{iso-8859-1}, \c{iso8859-1} and \c{iso_8859-1} are
all recognised, \c{GB2312} and \c{EUC-CN} both work, and so on.
+(You can list character sets known to Halibut with by invoking it
+with the \cw{--list-charsets} option; see \k{running-options}.)
This directive takes effect immediately after the \c{\\cfg} command.
All text after that until the end of the input file is expected to be
\c \cfg{chapter}{Chapter}
\c \cfg{section}{Section}
\c \cfg{appendix}{Appendix}
+\c \cfg{contents}{Contents}
+\c \cfg{index}{Index}
\c \cfg{input-charset}{ASCII}
The default for \cw{\\cfg\{input-charset\}} can be changed with the