[!TIP] Glossarium is based in great part of the work of Sébastien d'Herbais de Thun from his master thesis available at: https://github.com/Dherse/masterproef. His glossary is available under the MIT license here.
Glossarium is a simple, easily customizable typst glossary inspired by LaTeX glossaries package . You can see various examples showcasing the different features in the examples
folder.
#import "@preview/glossarium:0.5.1": make-glossary, register-glossary, print-glossary, gls, glspl
#show: make-glossary
#let entry-list = (
(
key: "kuleuven",
short: "KU Leuven",
long: "Katholieke Universiteit Leuven",
description: "A university in Belgium.",
),
// Add more terms
)
#register-glossary(entry-list)
// Your document body
#print-glossary(
entry-list
)
This manual assume you have a good enough understanding of typst markup and scripting.
For Typst 0.6.0 or later import the package from the typst preview repository:
#import "@preview/glossarium:0.5.1": make-glossary, register-glossary, print-glossary, gls, glspl
For Typst before 0.6.0 or to use glossarium as a local module, download the package files into your project folder and import glossarium.typ
:
#import "glossarium.typ": make-glossary, register-glossary, print-glossary, gls, glspl
After importing the package and before making any calls to gls
,print-glossary
or glspl
, please MAKE SURE you add this line
#show: make-glossary
WHY DO WE NEED THAT ? : In order to be able to create references to the terms in your glossary using typst ref syntax
@key
glossarium needs to setup some show rules before any references exist. This is due to the way typst works, there is no workaround.Therefore I recommend that you always put the
#show: ...
statement on the line just below the#import
statement.
First we have to define the terms. A term is a dictionary as follows:
Key | Type | Required/Optional | Description |
---|---|---|---|
key |
string | required | Case-sensitive, unique identifier used to reference the term. |
short |
string | semi-optional | The short form of the term replacing the term citation. |
long |
string or content | semi-optional | The long form of the term, displayed in the glossary and on the first citation of the term. |
description |
string or content | optional | The description of the term. |
plural |
string or content | optional | The pluralized short form of the term. |
longplural |
string or content | optional | The pluralized long form of the term. |
group |
string | optional | Case-sensitive group the term belongs to. The terms are displayed by groups in the glossary. |
#let entry-list = (
// minimal term
(
key: "kuleuven",
short: "KU Leuven"
),
// a term with a long form and a group
(
key: "unamur",
short: "UNamur",
long: "Namur University",
group: "Universities"
),
// a term with a markup description
(
key: "oidc",
short: "OIDC",
long: "OpenID Connect",
description: [
OpenID is an open standard and decentralized authentication protocol promoted by the non-profit
#link("https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenID#OpenID_Foundation")[OpenID Foundation].
],
group: "Acronyms",
),
// a term with a short plural
(
key: "potato",
short: "potato",
// "plural" will be used when "short" should be pluralized
plural: "potatoes",
description: [#lorem(10)],
),
// a term with a long plural
(
key: "dm",
short: "DM",
long: "diagonal matrix",
// "longplural" will be used when "long" should be pluralized
longplural: "diagonal matrices",
description: "Probably some math stuff idk",
),
)
Then the terms are passed as a list to register-glossary
#register-glossary(entry-list)
Now, you can display the glossary using the print-glossary
function.
#print-glossary(entry-list)
By default, the terms that are not referenced in the document are not shown in the glossary, you can force their appearance by setting the show-all
argument to true.
You can also disable the back-references by setting the parameter disable-back-references
to true
.
By default, group breaks use linebreaks
. This behaviour can be changed by setting the user-group-break
parameter to pagebreak()
, or colbreak()
, or any other function that returns the content
you want.
You can call this function from anywhere in your document.
Referencing terms is done using the key of the terms using the gls
function or the reference syntax.
// referencing the OIDC term using gls
#gls("oidc")
// displaying the long form forcibly
#gls("oidc", long: true)
// referencing the OIDC term using the reference syntax
@oidc
You can use the glspl
function and the references supplements to pluralize terms.
The plural
key will be used when short
should be pluralized and longplural
will be used when long
should be pluralized. If the plural
key is missing then glossarium will add an 's' at the end of the short form as a fallback.
#glspl("potato")
Please look at the examples regarding plurals.
You can also override the text displayed by setting the display
argument.
#gls("oidc", display: "whatever you want")
I recommend setting a show rule for the links to that your readers understand that they can click on the references to go to the term in the glossary.
#show link: set text(fill: blue.darken(60%))
// links are now blue !