% glossary.tex - thesis example with glossary \documentclass[12pt,glossary]{dalthesis} % to prepare draft version use option draft: %\documentclass[12pt,draft]{dalthesis} \begin{document} \mcs % options are \mcs, \macs, \mec, \mhi, \phd, and \bcshon \title{The title} \author{Noah Body} \defenceday{1} \defencemonth{November} \defenceyear{2010} \convocation{May}{2011} % Use multiple \supervisor commands for co-supervisors. % Use one \reader command for each reader. \supervisor{D. Prof} \reader{D. Odaprof} \reader{A. External} \nolistoftables \nolistoffigures \frontmatter \begin{abstract} This is a test document. \end{abstract} \printglossary \begin{acknowledgements} Thanks to all the little people who make me look tall. \end{acknowledgements} \mainmatter \chapter{Introduction} Get it done! Use reference material by Lamport~\cite{latex-by-lamport} or Gooses, Mittelback, and Samarin~\cite{latex-companion}. \chapter{Doing It} \section{Getting Ready} Get all the parts that I need. I can throw in a whole pile of terms like preparation\glossary{name={Preparation},description={Getting ready to do something}}, methodology\glossary{name={Methodology},description={The way to do something methodically}}, forethought\glossary{name={Forethought},description={Thinking ahead}}, and analysis\glossary{name={Analysis},description={Looking back at what you did to see what did or didn't work}} as examples for me to use in the future. \section{Next Step} Do it! Of course, you have to have pictures to show how you did it to make people understand things better. \chapter{Conclusion} Did it! \bibliographystyle{plain} \bibliography{simple} \end{document}