These are sample files illustrating the use of the glossaries package. If you are new to this package, start with minimalgls.tex to check you have glossaries correctly installed and to check that you understand how to use it. 1. Run minimalgls.tex through LaTeX ("compile the document") either by typing latex minimalgls in a terminal or by using the relevant button or menu item in your text editor or front-end. This will create the required associated files but you will not see the glossary. If you use PDFLaTeX you will also get warnings about non-existent references that look something like: pdfTeX warning (dest): name{glo:aca} has been referenced but does not exist, replaced by a fixed one These warnings may be ignored on the first run. If you get a "Missing \begin{document}" error, then it's most likely that your version of xkeyval.sty is out of date. Check the log file for a warning of that nature. If this is the case, please update your TeX distribution. 2. Run makeglossaries on the document. This can be done on a terminal either by typing makeglossaries minimalgls or by typing perl makeglossaries minimalgls If you don't have Perl installed you will need to run makeindex directly: makeindex -s minimalgls.ist -t minimalgls.glg -o minimalgls.gls minimalgls.glo Another alternative is to use the Java application makeglossariesgui (http://ctan.org/pkg/makeglossariesgui) which has diagnostic tools to help determine what has gone wrong if there's a problem. 3. Repeat step 1. Your document minimalgls.pdf should now have a glossary. If the above seems complicated, you can automate the process using tools such as latexmk or arara. See http://www.dickimaw-books.com/latex/thesis/html/build.html for further details.