MENDEX(1) | General Commands Manual | MENDEX(1) |
NAME
mendex - Japanese index processor
SYNOPSIS
mendex [-ilqrcgfEJSU] [-s sty] [-d dic] [-o ind] [-t log] [-p no] [-I enc] [--help] [--] [ idx0 idx1 idx2 ...]
DESCRIPTION
The program mendex is a general purpose hierarchical index
generator; it accepts one or more input files (.idx; often produced
by a text formatter such as LaTeX), sorts the entries, and produces an
output file which can be formatted. It is almost compatible with
makeindex, and additional feature for handling readings of kanji
words is also available.
The formats of the input and output files are specified in a style file. The
readings of kanji words can be specified in a dictionary file.
The index can have up to three levels (0, 1, and 2) of subitem nesting.
OPTIONS
- -i
- Take input from stdin, even when index files are specified.
- -l
- Set ´sort by character order´. By default, ´sort by word order´ is used. Details are described below.
- -q
- Quiet mode; send no message to stderr, except error messages and warnings.
- -r
- Disable implicit page range formation. By default, three or more successive pages are automatically abbreviated as a range (e.g. 1–5).
- -c
- Compress sequence of intermediate blanks (space(s) and/or tab(s)) into a space and ignore leading and trailing blank(s). By default, blanks in the index key are retained.
- -g
- Make Japanese index head A-line (A, Ka, Sa, ...; 10 characters) of the gojuon table (Japanese syllabary). By default, all 48 characters in the gojuon table are used.
- -f
- Force to output Kanji characters even non-existent in dictionaries.
- -s sty
- Employ sty as the style file.
- -d dic
- Employ dic as the dictionary file. The dictionary file is composed of lists of <index_word reading>.
- -o ind
- Employ ind as the output index file. By default, the file name is created by appending the extension ind to the base name of the first input file.
- -t log
- Employ log as the transcript file. By default, the file name is created by appending the extension ilg to the base name of the first input file.
- -p no
- Set the starting page number of the output index list to be no. The argument no may be numerical or one of the following: any (the next page to the end of contents), odd (the next odd page to the end of contents), even (the next even page to the end of contents).
- -E
- Set input/output character encoding to EUC-JP.
- -J
- Set input/output character encoding to JIS (ISO-2022-JP).
- -S
- Set input/output character encoding to Shift_JIS.
- -U
- Set input/output character encoding to UTF-8.
- -I enc
- Set internal character encoding to enc. The argument enc may be euc (EUC-JP) or utf8 (UTF-8). The default is set to utf8.
- --help
- Show summary of options.
- --
- Arguments after -- are not taken as options. This is useful when the input file name starts with '-'.
STYLE FILE
The style file informs mendex about the format of the idx input files and the intended format of the final output file. The format is upper compatible with the one for makeindex. The style file contains a list of <specifier attribute> pairs. There are two types of specifiers: input and output. Pairs do not have to appear in any particular order. A line begun by ´%´ is a comment.
Input file style parameter
- keyword <string>
- "\\indexentry"
- arg_open <char>
- ´{´
- arg_close <char>
- ´}´
- level <char>
- ´!´
- actual <char>
- ´@´
- encap <char>
- ´|´
- page_precedence <string>
- "rnaRA"
- quote <char>
- ´"´
- escape <char>
- ´\\´
Output file style parameter
- preamble <string>
- "\\begin{theindex}\n"
- postamble <string>
- "\n\n\\end{theindex}\n"
- setpage_prefix <string>
- "\n \\setcounter{page}{"
- setpage_suffix <string>
- "}\n"
- group_skip <string>
- "\n\n \\indexspace\n"
- item_0 <string>
- "\n \\item "
- item_1 <string>
- "\n \\subitem "
- item_2 <string>
- "\n \\subsubitem "
- item_01 <string>
- "\n \\subitem "
- item_x1 <string>
- "\n \\subitem "
- item_12 <string>
- "\n \\subsubitem "
- item_x2 <string>
- "\n \\subsubitem "
- delim_0 <string>
- ", "
- delim_1 <string>
- ", "
- delim_2 <string>
- ", "
- delim_n <string>
- ", "
- delim_r <string>
- "--"
- symhead_positive <string>
- "Symbols"
- symhead_negative <string>
- "symbols"
- character_order <string>
- "SNEJ"
ABOUT JAPANESE PROCESSING
mendex has an additional feature to simplify the procedure
of handling Japanese indexes, compared to makeindex. Users can save
the effort of manually specifying a reading for every kanji word.
Japanese kanji words are usually sorted by the syllables of their readings
(´Yomi´), which can be represented by kana (Hiragana,
Katakana) scripts. mendex accepts index words specified in kana
expression directly on an input file, and also accepts conversion from index
words to kana scripts by referring to Japanese dictionaries.
Examples of internal simplification of syllables are shown below.
かぶしきがいしゃ かふしきかいしや
マッキントッシュ まつきんとつしゆ
ワープロ わあふろ
The dictionary file consists of list with
<´index_word´ ´reading´>. The index word
can be written in any scripts (kanji, kana, etc), and the reading must be in
Hiragana or Katakana scripts. The delimiter between the index word and its
reading is one or more tab(s) or space(s).
An example of a Japanese dictionary is shown below.
漢字 かんじ
読み よみ
環境 かんきょう
α アルファ
Here, each index word is allowed to have only one Yomi. Though
some kanji words (ex. 「表」) may have more than one
Yomi´s (ex. 「ひょう」 and
「おもて」), only one of them can be
registered in the dictionary. When some different Yomi´s are needed,
they should be specified explicitly in kana expression (ex.
\index{ひょう@表} or
\index{おもて@表}) on the input file.
Moreover, a dictionary file is automatically referred by setting the file name
at an environment variable INDEXDEFAULTDICTIONARY. The dictionary set
by the environment variable can be used together with file(s) specified by
-d option.
ABOUT SORTING PROCEDURE
mendex sorts indexes as is (´sort by word
order´) by default. Setting -l option, spaces between words in
an index are truncated prior to sorting procedure (´sort by character
order´).
Even when sort by character order, the index at output remains the original
sequence without the truncation.
Follows show an example.
X Window Xlib
Xlib XView
XView X Window
In addition, two sorting methods can be applied for indexes which
contains both Japanese kana and other scripts (e.g. Latin script). By
setting priority 0 (default) and 1 at a style file, a space between
Japanese Kana and other scripts is inserted and not inserted respectively,
prior to the sorting procedure.
Follows show an example.
index sort indファイル
indファイル index sort
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
mendex refers environment variables as follows.
- INDEXSTYLE
- Directory where index style files exist.
- INDEXDEFAULTSTYLE
- Index style file to be referred to as default.
- INDEXDICTIONARY
- Directory where dictionary files exist.
- INDEXDEFAULTDICTIONARY
- Dictionary file which is automatically read.
DETAIL
Detailed specification is compatible with makeindex.
KNOWN ISSUES
When plural page number expression is used, .idx files should be specified along with the order of page numbers. Otherwise, wrong page numbers might be output.
SEE ALSO
tex(1), latex(1), makeindex(1)
AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Japanese TeX Development Community.