\begin{theindex}...\end{theindex}
) tells
LATEX to use a two-column page layout. Each \item
is
left justified against the column margin and each \subitem
is indented
by 20 points, \subsubitem
by 30, etc.
There is a vertical space bound to
\indexspace
inserted before the beginning of a new letter
(e.g., before beta
).
The formatting independence problem refers to whether or not the final index
can be formatted independently of the entire document.
Indexing is typically the last step of document preparation, and
is attempted only when the entire document is finalized.
It is desirable to be able to generate the index without
reformatting the entire document. To be able to format
the index separately, the global context must be known, which is made possible
by the extensible style facility in our design.
One can redefine preamble
and postamble
to
invoke a style consistent with the original document.
The other information needed to perform effective separate formatting is the starting page number for the index. Some styles require that the index start on an even or odd page number. In either case, there must be provisions for including the correct starting page number in the pre-formatted version of index.