For the main glossaries user guide, see glossaries-user.pdf.
texdoc glossaries-userFor a shorter guide for beginners, see glossariesbegin.pdf.
texdoc glossariesbegin
 
The glossary package started out as an example in a tutorial, but I decided that I may as well package it up and upload it to CTAN. Unfortunately it was fairly rigid and unable to adapt well to the wide variation in glossary styles. Users began making requests for enhancements, but with each enhancement the code became more complicated and bugs crept in. Each fix in one place seemed to cause another problem elsewhere. In the end, it was taking up too much of my time to maintain, so I decided to replace it with a much better designed package. With the new glossaries package: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
(Additional indexing options have since been added. See the “Indexing Options” section of the glossaries user manual.) 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
When converting a document that currently uses the obsolete glossary package to the replacement glossaries package, it should be fairly obvious that the first thing you need to do is replace  
 
 
If you have created new glossary types, you will need to  replace all instances of  
The  optional argument can be converted to  using the same mapping given in  Table 1. 
For example, if your document contains the following:  
Note that the glossary title is no longer specified using  
 
All instances of  
 
With the old glossary package you could optionally store glossary information for later use, or you could simply use  
Substitute all instances of  
If you have used the optional argument of  
The glossary entry information  may also need  changing. If  contains any of makeindex’s  special characters (i.e.  
The number key available in  
The  
 
The glossary package provided two basic means to add information to the glossary: firstly, the term was defined using  
 
The glossary package allows you to add information to the glossary for a predefined term without producing any text in the document using  
 
The glossary package allows you to add information to the glossary for a predefined term with the given text using  
 
The glossary defines:  
 
When using the glossaries package, you should not use  
If, with the old package, you have opted to explicitly use  
If you don’t like the idea of continually scrolling back to the preamble to type all your  
 
In the glossary package, acronyms were treated differently to glossary entries. This resulted in inconsistencies and sprawling unmaintainable code. The new glossaries package treats acronyms in exactly the same way as normal glossary terms.  
Both packages provide  
This is different to the glossary package which set the name key to  () and allowed you to set a description using the description key. If you still want to do this, you can use one of the description styles, such as long-short-desc, and use the description key in the optional argument of  
For example, if your document originally had the following:  
With the old glossary package, when you defined an acronym, it also defined a command  
If you have used  
Alternatively (as from v1.18 of the glossaries package), you can use  
 
In the glossary package, it is possible to produce the long and short forms of an acronym without adding an entry to the glossary using  
See the “Acronyms” of the glossaries manual for further details of how to use these commands. 
 
The glossary package command  
 
The glossary package allows you to reset and unset the acronym flag which is used to determine whether the acronym has been used in the document. The glossaries package also provides a means to do this on either a local or a global level. To reset an acronym, you will need to replace:  
To unset an acronym, you will need to replace:  
To reset all acronyms, you will need to replace:  
 
The glossary package provides the command  
The glossary package allows you to specify a short title (for the table of contents and page header) by defining a command of the form  
 
If you convert your document from using the glossary package to the glossaries package, you will need to delete any of the additional files, such as the glo file, that were created by the glossary package, as the glossaries package uses a different format.  Remember also, that if you used the makeglos Perl script, you will need to use the makeglossaries Perl script  instead. As from v1.17, the glossaries package can be used with either makeindex or xindy. Since xindy was designed to be multilingual, the  new glossaries package is a much better option for  non-English documents. If you use the extension package, glossaries-extra, then you also have the option of using bib2gls instead (which also provides multilingual support). 
For further information on using makeglossaries, makeindex or xindy to create your glossaries, see the “Generating the Associated Glossary Files” section of the glossaries documentation. 
 
Please check the FAQ  for the glossaries package if you have any problems. 
 
1. Why the Need for a New Package?
 
 
2. Package Options
\usepackage{glossary} with \usepackage{glossaries}, however some of the package options are different, so you may need to change those as well. Table 1 shows the mappings from the glossary  to the glossaries package options.
 glossary option  
 glossaries option 
style=list  
 style=list 
style=altlist  
 style=altlist 
style=long,header=none,border=none,cols=2  
 style=long  
style=long,header=plain,border=none,cols=2  
 style=longheader  
style=long,header=none,border=plain,cols=2  
 style=longborder  
style=long,header=plain,border=plain,cols=2  
 style=longheaderborder  
style=long,header=none,border=none,cols=3  
 style=long3col  
style=long,header=plain,border=none,cols=3  
 style=long3colheader  
style=long,header=none,border=plain,cols=3  
 style=long3colborder  
style=long,header=plain,border=plain,cols=3  
 style=long3colheaderborder  
style=super,header=none,border=none,cols=2  
 style=super  
style=super,header=plain,border=none,cols=2  
 style=superheader  
style=super,header=none,border=plain,cols=2  
 style=superborder  
style=super,header=plain,border=plain,cols=2  
 style=superheaderborder  
style=super,header=none,border=none,cols=3  
 style=super3col  
style=super,header=plain,border=none,cols=3  
 style=super3colheader  
style=super,header=none,border=plain,cols=3  
 style=super3colborder  
style=super,header=plain,border=plain,cols=3  
 style=super3colheaderborder  
number=none  
 nonumberlist  
number=  
 counter= 
toc  
 toc  
hypertoc  
 toc  
hyper  
 no corresponding option 
section=true  
 section  
section=false  
 no corresponding option 
acronym  
 acronym  
global  
 no corresponding option  
3. Defining new glossary types
with \newglossarytype[]{}{}{}[]\newcommand{name}{}
in the preamble, and, if the new glossary requires a different style to the main (default) glossary, you will also need to put \newglossary[]{}{}{}{}
immediately before the glossary is displayed, or you can specify the style when you display the glossary using \setglossarystyle{}
\printglossary (see below). 
 You will need to replace the above two lines with: \newglossarytype[nlg]{notation}{not}{ntn}[style=long,header]
\newcommand{\notationname}{Index of Notation}
 in the preamble and set the style to longheader with \newglossary[nlg]{notation}{not}{ntn}{Index of Notation}
 prior to displaying this glossary. Alternatively, you can specify the style using style package option (which makes it the default style) or the style key in the optional argument of \setglossarystyle{longheader}
\printglossary. For example: \printglossary[type=notation,style=longheader]
\name (except for \glossaryname and \acronymname) but is instead specified in the  argument of \newglossary. The short title which is specified in the glossary package by the command \shortname is now specified using the toctitle key in the optional argument to \printglossary.4. 
\make\make (e.g.  \makeglossary and \makeacronym) should be replaced by the single command \makeglossaries. For example, if your document contained the following: 
 then you should replace both lines with the single line: \makeglossary
\makeacronym
\makeglossaries
5. Storing glossary information
\glossary whenever you wanted to add information to the glossary. With the new glossaries package, the latter option is no longer available. (This is mainly because having a key value list in \glossary caused problems, but it also helps consistency.) If you have stored all the glossary information using \storeglosentry, then you will need to convert these commands into the equivalent \newglossaryentry. If you have only used \glossary, then see §6.4.
with \storeglosentry{}{}
This should be fairly easy to do using the search and replace facility in your editor (but see notes below).\newglossaryentry{}{}
\storeglosentry (i.e. you have multiple glossaries) then you will need to substitute 
with \storeglosentry[]{}{}
\newglossaryentry{}{,type={}}
@ ! " or |) then they should no longer be escaped with " since the glossaries package deals with these characters internally. For example, if your document contains the following: 
 then you will need to replace it with: \storeglosentry{card}{name={$"|\mathcal{S}"|$},
description={The cardinality of the set $\mathcal{S}$}}
\newglossaryentry{card}{name={$|\mathcal{S}|$},
description={The cardinality of the set $\mathcal{S}$}}
\storeglosentry should be replaced with the counter key in \newglossaryentry. The sort key in \storeglosentry is also called sort in \newglossaryentry.\storeglosentry format key doesn’t have a counterpart in \newglossaryentry. You can, however, specify the format in the optional argument of commands like \gls or \glsadd or you can change the default format by redefining \glsnumberformat.6. Adding an entry to the glossary
\storeglosentry and the entries for that term were added using \useglosentry, \useGlosentry and \gls. Secondly, the term was added to the glossary using \glossary. This second approach is unavailable with the glossaries package, since all entries must be defined before they can be indexed.6.1. 
\useglosentry
Any occurrences of this command will need to be replaced with \useglosentry[]{}
The format key in  is also called format in . However the optdefnumber={} key in  should be replaced with optdefcounter= in .\glsadd[]{}
6.2. 
\useGlosentry
Any occurrences of this command will need to be replaced with \useGlosentry[]{}{}
The mapping from  to  is the same as that given §6.1.\glslink[]{}{}
6.3. 
\gls
 The glossaries package defines a command with the same name, but be aware that it has a final optional argument: \gls (glossary.sty)[]{}
 In this case, the only thing you need to change is the number key in the optional argument to counter. The  optional argument in the  new form of \gls (glossaries.sty)[]{}[]
\gls can be used to insert text into the automatically generated text, which will put it inside the hyperlink (if hyperlinks are supported).6.4. 
\glossary\glossary. This is because the appropriate indexing syntax (including escaping any of makeindex’s or xindy’s special characters) is generated when the entry is defined. This reduces overall complexity as it no longer needs to be performed every time an entry is indexed. By placing the glossary definitions within the preamble, it also reduces the chance that the indexing special character may have their category code changed, which can cause interference.\glossary instead of storing the glossary information with \storeglosentry, then converting from glossary to glossaries will be more time-consuming, although in the end, I hope you will see the benefits. From the user’s point of view, using \glossary throughout the document is time consuming, and if you use it more than once for the same term, there’s a chance extra spaces may creep in which will cause makeindex to treat the two entries as different terms, even though they look the same in the document. If you have used \glossary with the old glossary package, you will instead need to define the relevant glossary terms using \newglossaryentry and reference the terms using \glsadd, \glslink, \gls etc.\newglossaryentry commands, you may prefer to create a new file, in which to store all these commands, and then input that file in your document’s preamble. Most text editors and front-ends allow you to have multiple files open, and you can tab back and forth between them.7. Acronyms
\newacronym, but the syntax is different. With the glossary package, the syntax is: 
 With the glossaries package, the default definition of: \newacronym (glossary.sty)[]{}{}{}
 is a shortcut for: \newacronym (glossaries.sty)[]{}{}{}
 (Note that this shortcut default is an older method of defining acronyms. If you use \newglossaryentry{}{type=\acronymtype,
name={},
description={},
text={},
first={ ()},
plural={s},
firstplural={s (s)},
}
\setacronymstyle introduced to glossaries v4.02, then a more flexible method is adopted.)\newacronym.
 Then you would need to first set the style: \newacronym{SVM}{Support Vector Machine}{description={Statistical pattern recognition technique}}
 and change the acronym definition to: \setacronymstyle{long-short-desc}
 You can then reference the acronym using any of the new referencing commands, such as \newacronym[description={Statistical pattern recognition  technique}]{svm}{SVM}{Support Vector Machine}
\gls or \glsadd.\ which could be used to display the acronym in the text. So the above SVM example would create the command \SVM with the old package. In the new glossaries package, the acronyms are just another type of glossary entry, so they are displayed using \gls{}\SVM with \gls{svm}\useacronym instead of \, then you will need to replace all occurrences of 
with \useacronym[]{}
Note that the starred versions of \gls{}[]
\useacronym and \ (which make the first letter uppercase) should be replaced with \Gls{}\oldacronym which uses the same syntax as the old glossary package’s \newacronym and also  defines \. For example, if your document originally had the following: 
 then you can change this to: \newacronym{SVM}{Support Vector Machine}{description={Statistical pattern recognition technique}}
 You can then continue to use \oldacronym{SVM}{Support Vector Machine}{description={Statistical pattern recognition technique}}
\SVM. However, remember that LaTeX generally ignores spaces after command names that consist of alphabetical characters. You will therefore need to force a space after \, unless you also load the xspace package. (See the “Acronyms” of the glossaries documentation for further details.) Note that \oldacronym uses its first argument to define the acronym’s label (as used by commands like \gls), so in the above example, with the new glossaries package, \SVM becomes a shortcut for \gls{SVM}\SVM* becomes a shortcut for \Gls{SVM}7.1. 
\acrln and \acrsh\acrln and \acrsh. With the  glossaries package (provided you defined the acronym using \newacronym or \oldacronym and provided you haven’t redefined \newacronym)  you can replace 
with \acrsh{}
and you can replace \acrshort{}
with \acrln{}
The glossaries package also provides the related commands \acrlong{}
\acrshortpl (plural short form) and \acrlongpl (plural long form) as well as upper case variations. If you use the  glossaries “shortcuts” package option, you can use \acs in place of \acrshort and \acl in place of \acrlong.7.2. 
\ifacronymfirstuse
can be replaced by the glossaries command: \ifacronymfirstuse{}{}{}
Note that \ifglsused{}{}{}
\ifglsused evaluates the opposite condition to that of \ifacronymfirstuse which is why the last two arguments have been reversed.7.3. 
\resetacronym and \unsetacronym
with either \resetacronym{}
or \glsreset{}
\glslocalreset{}
with either \unsetacronym{}
or \glsunset{}
\glslocalunset{}
 with \resetallacronyms
 or \glsresetall[\acronymtype]
 To unset all acronyms, you will need to replace: \glslocalresetall[\acronymtype]
 with \unsetallacronyms
 or \glsunsetall[\acronymtype]
\glslocalunsetall[\acronymtype]
8. Displaying the glossary
\printglossary (or \print for other glossary types) which can be used to print individual glossaries. The glossaries package provides the command \printglossaries which  will print all the glossaries which have been defined, or \printglossary (glossaries.sty)[] to print individual glossaries. So if you just have \printglossary, then you can leave it as it is, but if you have, say: 
 or \printglossary
\printglossary[acronym]
 then you will need to replace this with either \printglossary
\printacronym*
 or  \printglossaries
\printglossary
\printglossary[type=\acronymtype]
\shortname. The glossaries package doesn’t do this, but instead provides the toctitle key which can be used in the optional argument to \printglossary. For example, if you have created a new glossary type called notation, and you had defined 
 then you would need to use the toctitle key: \newcommand{\shortnotationname}{Notation}
 The glossaries package will ignore \printglossary[type=notation,toctitle=Notation]
\shortnotationname, so unless you have used it elsewhere in the document, you may as well remove the definition.9. Processing Your Document
10. Troubleshooting
Symbols
Index
Symbols
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