X-Git-Url: http://gitweb.michael.orlitzky.com/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=GNUmakefile;h=49cca6a6cc4aff1a4acee75c6d8017e25ce61bb7;hb=71b85fe2012cdf733f6e72137038d7d9960ddf08;hp=799b6dbd61d2e1c14bf5078d53fdd0943144192b;hpb=d4712abb88a2f342f31bbd60426d1a983df05ac2;p=mjotex.git diff --git a/GNUmakefile b/GNUmakefile index 799b6db..49cca6a 100644 --- a/GNUmakefile +++ b/GNUmakefile @@ -18,7 +18,7 @@ PN = examples # # Leave commented if you don't use a bibliography database. # -#BIBS = references.bib +BIBS = local-references.bib # A space-separated list of the mjotex files that you use. The path to # mjotex must be contain in your $TEXINPUTS environment variable. @@ -36,6 +36,8 @@ MJOTEX += mjo-theorem-star.tex mjo-topology.tex mjo.bst SAGE_LISTING_SRCS = $(wildcard sage_listings/*.listing) SAGE_LISTING_DSTS = $(patsubst %.listing,%.py,$(SAGE_LISTING_SRCS)) +INDICES = $(PN) + # Use kpsewhich (from the kpathsea suite) to find the absolute paths # of the bibtex/mjotex files listed in in $(BIBS)/$(MJOTEX). The SRCS # variable should contain all (Bib)TeX source files for the document. @@ -48,7 +50,15 @@ ifdef MJOTEX MJOTEXPATHS = $(shell kpsewhich $(MJOTEX)) SRCS += $(MJOTEXPATHS) endif +ifdef SAGE_LISTING_DSTS +SRCS += $(SAGE_LISTING_DSTS) +endif +ifdef INDICES +INDEX_SRCS = $(addsuffix .idx,$(INDICES)) +INDEX_DSTS = $(addsuffix .ind,$(INDICES)) +SRCS += $(INDEX_DSTS) +endif # The first target is the default, so put the PDF document first. # @@ -110,6 +120,21 @@ $(PN).aux: $(SRCS) $(LATEX) $(PN).tex +ifdef INDICES +# We need to be able to build the index source files without involving +# the main $(PN).pdf rule, in order to avoid a chicken-and-egg problem. +# This is similar to the $(PN).aux rule above, except that an index is +# optional and there might be more than one of them. +$(INDEX_SRCS): $(PN).tex + $(LATEX) $(PN).tex +endif + +ifdef INDICES +# Create real indices from source files by running "makeindex" on them. +%.ind: %.idx + makeindex $< +endif + # The pipe below indicates an "order-only dependency" on the aux file. # Without it, every compilation of $(PN).tex would produce a new # $(PN).aux, and thus $(PN).bbl would be rebuilt. This in turn causes