\documentclass{article}
\usepackage[
backend=biber,
style=alphabetic,
sorting=ynt
]{biblatex}
\usepackage{geometry}
\geometry{
a4paper,
total={170mm,257mm},
left=20mm,
top=20mm,
}
\usepackage[acronym]{glossaries}
\usepackage{optidef}
\addbibresource{mybibliography.bib}
\makeglossaries
\newglossaryentry{entryOne}
{
name=Glossary Entry,
description={Glossary entries are used to provide definitions for words in your document}
}
\title{Literature Review }
\author{Author Name}
\date{November 2021}
\begin{document}
\maketitle
\section{Some Terminology}
There is none!
\section{Some optimization problems}
\begin{mini}|s|[0]
{y \in Y, u \in U}{J(y,u)}
{}
{\label{eq:minimizationProblem}}{}
\addConstraint{F(y,u)}{= 0}
\addConstraint{c(y,u)}{ = 0}
\addConstraint{h(y,u)}{ \ge 0}
\end{mini}
Above, you can see a minimization problem! We can refer to \gls{entryOne} for some clues as to what this means. We can also cite how we learned about this optimization problem! \cite{terribleBook}
\medskip
\printglossary
\printbibliography
\end{document}