This plugin hasn’t been tested with the latest 3 major releases of WordPress. It may no longer be maintained or supported and may have compatibility issues when used with more recent versions of WordPress.

Lexicographer

Description

Lexicographer creates an alphabetical index of your blog, using keywords you choose. The index can be included in any page, post or text widget. Here’s an example of such an index.

I wrote this plugin because I like to invent words and define them on my blog, thereby creating a dictionary distributed over several posts. Not only was there no list of all the words available, it was also that Google wouldn’t find the words because it couldn’t deal with the stress marks I put in there, dictionary-style. Lexicographer solves both of these problems.

Lexicographer’s index is divided into sections, according to the initial characters of terms. Such sections are currently created for the Latin letters (A-Z, letters with diacritics are grouped with the non-diacriticized versions), Hindi characters, and Telugu characters. A single section “#” is created for all Arabic digits (0-9). All other initial characters go into a special section titled “*”. Contributions to add support for other writing systems are welcome!

Usage

Lexicographer does not add any new elements to the WordPress admin interface. Instead, you use it as follows:

In the posts and pages where you define terms, use “Edit as HTML” and put the words and terms to index in spans of class lemma, like so: <span class="lemma">ˌsu·per·ca·liˌfra·gi·lis·ticˌex·pi·a·liˈdo·cious</span> (the stress and hyphenation marks are of course optional).

In the page (or post, or text widget) where you’d like the index to live, paste the following shortcode:

[lexicographer_index]

At this place, the index will be inserted. It will consist of the defined terms, linking to the definitions.

Shortcode attributes:

  • anchorlinks [true/false, default: true]: If true, anchored links to the terms
    will be created. If false, links to the post(s) containing the term will be
    created.
  • headerlevel [int, default: 3]: Which heading level to use for the capical
    characters in the index.

Support

If you have questions or suggestions, contact me at poststelle ät texttheater döt net.

Installation

Either:

  1. Search for and install Lexicographer directly through the ‘Plugins’ menu in
    WordPress

Or:

  1. Download and unzip Lexicographer
  2. Upload the lexicographer directory to the /wp-content/plugins directory
  3. Activate the plugin through the ‘Plugins’ menu in WordPress

Reviews

september 3, 2016
I've used this plugin for six months now. It's extremely easy to use and setup. Just provide some markup for the words you want in the lexicon, enter the shortcode where you want the lexicon to appear and you're done. If you have a large number of words (100+) to index, there are probably better options. The plugin does not support any form of sub-pages, i.e. if you have several words that start with an "a", they'll all be listed below each other. That being said, this a great, free plugin, which I highly recommend.
Read all 2 reviews

Contributors & Developers

“Lexicographer” is open source software. The following people have contributed to this plugin.

Contributors

Translate “Lexicographer” into your language.

Interested in development?

Browse the code, check out the SVN repository, or subscribe to the development log by RSS.

Changelog

0.9

  • Added support for Telugu and Hindi (contribution by Sriram Nadiminti).
  • Tested with WordPress 5.1.1.

0.8

  • Changed how the Lexicographer index is inserted in posts and pages. You must
    now use shortcodes instead of pasting the

{{Lexicographer index}}

string where you want the index to appear.
* Using the shortcode, you can now specify the heading level of the capital
character and if you want anchoring links for the terms or just plain links
to posts.
* Tested with WordPress 4.4.2.

0.7

  • The individual index sections are now put into divs of class
    lexicographer-index-section for the benefit of those who want to style and/or
    script the index.

0.6.

  • The index is now put into a div of class lexicographer-index for the benefit
    of those who want to style and/or script the index.

0.5

  • Transliteration of lemmas to ASCII both for creating anchor names and for
    sorting now uses the same transliteration table. The characters ÄäÖöÜü
    (graphemes corresponding to German umlauts) still receive special treatment
    in that they are expanded à la ä → ae for anchor names (but not for sorting),
    but this is now done as a preprocessing step.
  • The transliteration table now covers almost every latin-derived letter in the
    Unicode blocks Latin-1 Supplement, Latin Extended-A, Latin Extended-B and
    Latin Extended Additional. Most transliterations are “glyph-oriented” in that
    they involve only removing diacritic marks, decomposing ligatures and
    rotating letters back. A few transliterations are more “usage-oriented”, such
    as ß → ss, þ → th or Ɣ → g. Some effort was made to keep the transliteration
    table sane, consistent and language-neutral. Missing letters are indicated in
    comments. Suggestions for additions and improvement are more than welcome!
  • Bugfix: generated links were broken if not using /%postname permalinks.
  • Bugfix: was indexing unpublished posts/pages on installation.

0.4

  • Now observing DB_CHARSET for creating the database table. This fixes a
    problem where non-ASCII characters get replaced by question marks when
    inserting into the table via a UTF-8 connection.
  • Tested with WordPress 3.3.2.
  • Updated documentation.

0.3

  • Index can now be inserted in widgets.
  • Tested with WordPress 3.3.
  • Updated documentation.

0.2

  • Lemmas are now removed from the index when the post/page containing them is
    deleted or otherwise unpublished.
  • The index now uses absolute links.
  • Tested with WordPress 2.9.1.
  • Updated documentation.

0.1

  • Initial release.