/usr/share/xindy/styles/makeidx.xdy is in xindy-rules 2.4-1.1.
This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.
The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 | ;; $Id: makeidx.xdy,v 1.1 1997/02/07 14:17:31 kehr Exp $
;;
;; This file implements the Output Style Specifiers for plain
;; makeindex (see manpage of makeindex 2.x) in conjuction with
;; TeX/LaTeX.
;;
;; The Input Style Specifiers of makeindex cannot de defined in a
;; `xindy' style file. Use an appropriate version of the program
;; `tex2xindy' which should be included with this distribution.
;;
;; Since `xindy' uses a different specification language than
;; makeindex and some of the command-line options of makeindex are now
;; only available as style-file commands, this file can only serve as
;; a template that produces the default-markup of makeindex. However,
;; it may be used as a starting point for further modification and
;; specialization.
;;
;; The following values are taken from the source of the makeindex
;; distribution (see file scanst.h and the manpage) for further
;; details.
;;
;; Define all attributes appearing in your document. Your attributes
;; are all encapsulators you use in your \index commands following the
;; vertical bar sign `|'. For example `foo' is the attribute in the
;; command \index{...|foo}. Here you specify the set of attributes
;; that appear in your document, the order in which they appear in the
;; index and which one superdes the other.
;;
;; Example: a) (define-attibutes (("default") ("bf") ("it")))
;; b) (define-attibutes (("bf" "default")))
;;
;; The initial command is (change it accordingly):
(define-attributes ("default"))
;; The description of the location-classes.
;; Add more location classes as needed.
(define-location-class "arabic-page-numbers" ("arabic-numbers"))
(define-location-class "roman-page-numbers" ("roman-numbers-lowercase"))
(define-location-class "Roman-page-numbers" ("roman-numbers-uppercase"))
(define-location-class "alpha-page-numbers" ("alpha"))
(define-location-class "Alpha-page-numbers" ("ALPHA"))
;; The most frequently used cross reference class "see". Add more, if
;; necessary.
(define-crossref-class "see")
(markup-crossref-list :open "\see{" :close "}{}" :class "see")
;; In makeindex: page_precedence <string> "rnaRA"
;; List all location classes appearing in your document.
(define-location-class-order ("roman-page-numbers"
"arabic-page-numbers"
"alpha-page-numbers"
"Roman-page-numbers"
"Alpha-page-numbers"
"see"))
;; preamble <string> "\\begin{theindex}\n"
;; postamble <string> "\n\n\\end{theindex}\n"
(markup-index :open "\begin{theindex}~n"
:close "~n~n\end{theindex}~n"
:tree)
;; These specifiers are not directly supported via a command-line
;; switch as in makeindex. Add the appropriate markup-commands into
;; the preamble.
;; setpage_prefix <string> "~n \setcounter{page}{"
;; setpage_suffix <string> "}~n"
;; group_skip <string> "~n~n \indexspace~n"
(markup-letter-group-list :sep "~n~n \indexspace~n")
;; The indexentries (item_<..> specifiers)
(markup-indexentry :open "~n \item " :depth 0)
(markup-indexentry :open "~n \subitem " :depth 1)
(markup-indexentry :open "~n \subsubitem " :depth 2)
;; Location-references
;; delim_0 <string> ", "
;; delim_1 <string> ", "
;; delim_2 <string> ", "
(markup-locclass-list :open ", " :sep ", ")
;; delim_n <string> ", "
(markup-locref-list :sep ", ")
;; delim_r <string> "--"
(markup-range :sep "--")
;; Here follow all letter-groups. The short-cut notation is used here.
(define-letter-groups
("a" "b" "c" "d" "e" "f" "g" "h" "i" "j" "k" "l" "m"
"n" "o" "p" "q" "r" "s" "t" "u" "v" "w" "x" "y" "z"))
;;
;; The sort-rules map all letters to their lowercase counterpart.
;;
(sort-rule "A" "a")
(sort-rule "B" "b")
(sort-rule "C" "c")
(sort-rule "D" "d")
(sort-rule "E" "e")
(sort-rule "F" "f")
(sort-rule "G" "g")
(sort-rule "H" "h")
(sort-rule "I" "i")
(sort-rule "J" "j")
(sort-rule "K" "k")
(sort-rule "L" "l")
(sort-rule "M" "m")
(sort-rule "N" "n")
(sort-rule "O" "o")
(sort-rule "P" "p")
(sort-rule "Q" "q")
(sort-rule "R" "r")
(sort-rule "S" "s")
(sort-rule "T" "t")
(sort-rule "U" "u")
(sort-rule "V" "v")
(sort-rule "W" "w")
(sort-rule "X" "x")
(sort-rule "Y" "y")
(sort-rule "Z" "z")
;; That's all ;-)
;; End
;; Local Variables:
;; mode: lisp
;; End:
|