"The parades carry on the regemental traditions established in the founding of the modern Indian army. They incorporate decorative and incredibly coreographed marches that fuse the best of Royal Indian Army and Indian military traditions. Each regiment, infantry, armoured, mechanized or air have their own unique dress and marches.
Drill formation is a very exact science in the Indian military, and is an integral part of regimental training, moreso than in British and American militaries. It's used to tech regimental standards, create regimental loyalty, increase unit cohesion and instill discipline."
But how much are that kind of parade drills trained and how it is possible to get a hundred men in each rows and get them march correctly in same time? That must be f*cking difficult and trained at least few times because even 10 times smaller formations need a lot of training and are easily screw up anyway.
We don't have special parade traditions and drills are trained only enough to fill basic needs like to get the whole bunch from point A to point B in formation like from barracks to mess hall. Of course all rows and lines are adjusted to be straight and falling in from quarter rooms trained to be fast. Usually some extra time is reserved for train that s*it, from rooms to formation -> back to rooms -> formation -> rooms -> formation and so on about dozen times and gets everyone to piss of
Basic stuff, platoons standing in three rows, basic commands: attention, dress, eyes front, present arms, shoulder arms, right face, left face, about face, forward march and platoon halt and others and seems like in this photo taken from camp Ville KFOR. Looks very simple and less awesome but fills the needs.
http://www.mil.fi/rauhanturvaaja/get2data.php?id=4