NAME¶
xindy - create sorted and tagged index from raw index
SYNOPSIS¶
xindy [-V?h] [-qv] [-d magic] [-o outfile.ind] [-t log] \
[-L lang] [-C codepage] [-M module] [-I input] \
[--interactive] [--mem-file=xindy.mem] \
[idx0 idx1 ...]
GNU-Style Long Options for Short Options:
-V / --version
-? / -h / --help
-q / --quiet
-v / --verbose
-d / --debug (multiple times)
-o / --out-file
-t / --log-file
-L / --language
-C / --codepage
-M / --module (multiple times)
-I / --input-markup (supported: latex, omega, xindy)
DESCRIPTION¶
xindy is the formatter-indepedent command of xindy, the flexible indexing
system. It takes a raw index as input, and produces a merged, sorted and
tagged index. Merging, sorting, and tagging is controlled by xindy style
files.
Files with the raw index are passed as arguments. If no arguments are passed,
the raw index will be read from standard input.
xindy is completely described in its manual that you will find on its Web
Site,
http://www.xindy.org/. A good introductionary description appears in the
indexing chapter of the LaTeX Companion (2nd ed.)
If you want to produce an index for LaTeX documents, the command
texindy(1) is probably more of interest for you. It is a wrapper for
xindy that turns on many LaTeX conventions by default.
OPTIONS¶
- "--version" / -V
- output version numbers of all relevant components and
exit.
- "--help" / -h / -?
- output usage message with options explanation.
- "--quiet" / -q
- Don't output progress messages. Output only error
messages.
- "--verbose" / -v
- Output verbose progress messages.
- "--debug" magic / -d
magic
- Output debug messages, this option may be specified
multiple times. magic determines what is output:
magic remark
------------------------------------------------------------
script internal progress messages of driver scripts
keep_tmpfiles don't discard temporary files
markup output markup trace, as explained in xindy manual
level=n log level, n is 0 (default), 1, 2, or 3
- "--out-file" outfile.ind / -o
outfile.ind
- Output index to file outfile.ind. If this option is
not passed, the name of the output file is the base name of the first
argument and the file extension ind. If the raw index is read from
standard input, this option is mandatory.
- "--log-file" log.ilg / -t
log.ilg
- Output log messages to file log.ilg. These log
messages are independent from the progress messages that you can influence
with "--debug" or "--verbose".
- "--language" lang / -L
lang
- The index is sorted according to the rules of language
lang. These rules are encoded in a xindy module created by
make-rules.
If no input encoding is specified via "--codepage", a xindy module
for that language is searched with a latin, a cp, an iso, or ascii
encoding, in that order.
- "--codepage" enc / -C
enc
- The raw input is in input encoding enc. This
information is used to select the correct xindy sort module and also the
inputenc target encoding for "latex" input markup.
When "omega" input markup is used, "utf8" is always used
as codepage, this option is then ignored.
- "--module" module / -M
module
- Load the xindy module module.xdy. This option may be
specified multiple times. The modules are searched in the xindy search
path that can be changed with the environment variable
"XINDY_SEARCHPATH".
- "--input-markup" input / -I
input
- Specifies the input markup of the raw index. Supported
values for input are "latex", "omega", and
"xindy".
"latex" input markup is the one that is emitted by default from
the LaTeX kernel, or by the "index" macro package of David
Jones. ^^-notation of single byte characters is supported. Usage of
LaTeX's inputenc package is assumed as well.
"omega" input markup is like "latex" input markup, but
with Omega's ^^-notation as encoding for non-ASCII characters. LaTeX
inputenc encoding is not used then, and "utf8" is
enforced to be the codepage.
"xindy" input markup is specified in the xindy manual.
- "--interactive"
- Start xindy in interactive mode. You will be in a xindy
read-eval-loop where xindy language expressions are read and evaluated
interactively.
- "--mem-file" xindy.mem
- This option is only usable for developers or in very rare
situations. The compiled xindy kernel is stored in a so-called memory
file, canonically named xindy.mem, and located in the xindy
library directory. This option allows to use another xindy kernel.
SUPPORTED LANGUAGES / CODEPAGES¶
The following languages are supported:
Latin scripts
albanian gypsy portuguese
croatian hausa romanian
czech hungarian russian-iso
danish icelandic slovak-small
english italian slovak-large
esperanto kurdish-bedirxan slovenian
estonian kurdish-turkish spanish-modern
finnish latin spanish-traditional
french latvian swedish
general lithuanian turkish
german-din lower-sorbian upper-sorbian
german-duden norwegian vietnamese
greek-iso polish
German recognizes two different sorting schemes to handle umlauts: normally,
"ae" is sorted like "ae", but in phone books or
dictionaries, it is sorted like "a". The first scheme is known as
DIN order, the second as
Duden order.
"*-iso" language names assume that the raw index entries are in ISO
8859-9 encoding.
"gypsy" is a northern Russian dialect.
Cyrillic scripts
belarusian mongolian serbian
bulgarian russian ukrainian
macedonian
Other scripts
greek klingon
Available Codepages
This is not yet written. You can look them up in your xindy distribution, in the
modules/lang/language/ directory (where
language is your
language). They are named
variant-codepage-lang.xdy, where
variant- is most often empty (for german, it's "din5007" and
"duden"; for spanish, it's "modern" and
"traditional", etc.)
< Describe available codepages for each language >
< Describe relevance of codepages (as internal representation) for
LaTeX inputenc >
ENVIRONMENT¶
- "XINDY_SEARCHPATH"
- A list of directories where the xindy modules are searched
in. No subtree searching is done (as in TDS-conformant TeX).
If this environment variable is not set, the default is used: ".:"
modules_dir":"modules_dir"/base".
modules_dir is determined at run time, relative to the xindy
command location: Either it's ../modules, that's the case for
opt-installations. Or it's ../lib/xindy/modules, that's the
case for usr-installations.
- "XINDY_LIBDIR"
- Library directory where xindy.mem is located.
The modules directory may be a subdirectory, too.
COMPATIBILITY TO MAKEINDEX¶
xindy does not claim to be completely compatible with MakeIndex, that
would prevent some of its enhancements. That said, we strive to deliver as
much compatibility as possible. The most important incompatibilities are
- •
- For raw index entries in LaTeX syntax,
"\index{aaa|bbb}" is interpreted differently. For MakeIndex
"bbb" is markup that is output as a LaTeX tag for this page
number. For xindy, this is a location attribute, an abstract
identifier that will be later associated with markup that should be output
for that attribute.
For straight-forward usage, when "bbb" is "textbf" or
similar, we supply location attribute definitions that mimic MakeIndex's
behaviour.
For more complex usage, when "bbb" is not an identifier, no such
compatibility definitions exist and may also not been created with current
xindy. In particular, this means that by default the LaTeX package
"hyperref" will create raw index files that cannot be processed
with xindy. This is not a bug, this is the unfortunate result of an
intented incompatibility. It is currently not possible to get both
hyperref's index links and use xindy.
A similar situation is reported to exist for the "memoir" LaTeX
class.
Programmers who know Common Lisp and Lex and want to work on a remedy should
please contact the author.
- •
- The MakeIndex compatibility definitions support only the
default raw index syntax and markup definition. It is not possible to
configure raw index parsing or use a MakeIndex style file to describe
output markup.
KNOWN ISSUES¶
Option
-q also prevents output of error messages. Error messages should
be output on stderr, progress messages on stdout.
There should be a way to output the final index to stdout. This would imply
-q, of course.
LaTeX raw index parsing should be configurable.
Codepage "utf8" should be supported for all languages, and should be
used as internal codepage for LaTeX inputenc re-encoding.
SEE ALSO¶
texindy(1),
tex2xindy(1)
AUTHOR¶
Joachim Schrod
LEGALESE¶
Copyright (c) 2004-2010 by Joachim Schrod.
xindy is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software
Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later
version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY
WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR
A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more
details.