On Mar 9, 2011, at 12:08 PM, houda araj wrote: > Thanks you all. > > What I want is to make the word google clickable not the page. > Suppose we have an index with word appearing only once. > > index > google > altavista > ask jeeves > etc. > > I may look into glossary instead of index ?
Yes. Then check out the glossaries package. It sounds like its much better suited to what you want. It is very well documented. Alan > > Houda > > > Date: Wed, 9 Mar 2011 17:31:41 +0100 > > From: susan.ditt...@gmx.de > > To: xetex@tug.org > > Subject: Re: [XeTeX] hypertext index > > > > Dear Houda, > > > > > > Quoting houda araj (h_a...@hotmail.com): > > > What is the syntax to make every word in the index clickable so one can > > > navigate from index words to the text ? > > > > > > Should we put instruction before each word in the index ? > > > > > > \hyperlink{\index}{Google} Recherche de \hyperlink{\index}{blogs} est > > > l'application de la \hyperlink{\index}{technologie de recherche} Google > > > aux blogs. Google est un fervent défenseur du mouvement > > > d'auto-publication que représentent les blogs. Nous espérons que Google > > > Recherche de blogs aidera nos utilisateurs. > > > > It's rather > > > > Google\index}{Google} Recherche de blogs\index{blog} est l'application de > > la technologie de recherche\index{technologie de recherche} Google aux > > blogs. [...] > > > > The \index{text} command marks a place on the page (I do not remember if > > you better choose the end or the beginning of the word or phrase you really > > want marked), and saves its page number together with the word 'text' > > (which does not need to be the same as the printed word!). Those lines > > (text plus page number) are written to a special file, which then can be > > processed (sorted, and entries for the same text combined) by makeindex or > > one of its sibling programs. This program's output then can be included in > > the next (Xe)(La)TeX run. The word (text) won't be klickable, but with > > hypertext the page numbers should be. > > > > The \hyperlink command works in the opposite direction. It makes the word > > (in place) klickable and points *away* from there, whereas the \index > > command creates something that points *towards* the place where that > > command was used. > > > > Hope that helps, > > > > Susan > > > > > > > > -------------------------------------------------- > > Subscriptions, Archive, and List information, etc.: > > http://tug.org/mailman/listinfo/xetex > > > -------------------------------------------------- > Subscriptions, Archive, and List information, etc.: > http://tug.org/mailman/listinfo/xetex -- Alan Munn am...@gmx.com -------------------------------------------------- Subscriptions, Archive, and List information, etc.: http://tug.org/mailman/listinfo/xetex