After the @multitable command defining the column widths (see
the previous section), you begin each row in the body of a multitable
with @item, and separate the column entries with @tab.
Line breaks are not special within the table body, and you may break
input lines in your source file as necessary.
Here is a complete example of a multi-column table (the text is from the GNU Emacs manual):
@multitable @columnfractions .15 .45 .4
@item Key @tab Command @tab Description
@item C-x 2
@tab @code{split-window-vertically}
@tab Split the selected window into two windows,
with one above the other.
@item C-x 3
@tab @code{split-window-horizontally}
@tab Split the selected window into two windows
positioned side by side.
@item C-Mouse-2
@tab
@tab In the mode line or scroll bar of a window,
split that window.
@end multitable
produces:
| Key @tab Command @tab Description | ||
| C-x 2 | split-window-vertically |
Split the selected window into two windows, | with one above the other.
| C-x 3 | split-window-horizontally |
Split the selected window into two windows | positioned side by side.
| C-Mouse-2 | In the mode line or scroll bar of a window, | split that window.
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