Dear Eric, Thanks for the reply.
>>>>> Eric S Fraga <e.fr...@ucl.ac.uk> writes: > On Wednesday, 16 Dec 2020 at 08:19, Colin Baxter wrote: >> However, tangling bibtex src blocks works without an explicit >> (bibtex . t). > Good. As it should. >> Indeed if I do insert such a line in my emacs init file, I get an >> error with "(require ob-bibtex) not found". > But there is no need for such a line as bibtex src blocks cannot > be evaluated. org babel makes no sense in this case. Yes, I thought that at the time. I think I was thrown by the initial error message, which prompted me to think that a file called "ob-bibtex.el" existed or had existed, and this would add some sort of functionality that I had yet to understand. >> Although the tangle of bibtex src blocks works well, the block >> itself often seem to have fontlock issues and sometimes it seems >> not to accept the standard bibtex comment, which begins with @ >> followed by a space and then text. > This will be a bibtex-mode issue, not an org issue? Does it font > lock correctly if you edit the src block in bibtex mode? This turns out to be a red herring. I find I can edit the source blocks and insert appropriate comment lines using C-c '. I forgot about this and was editing the source blocks directly in the org file.😱 > Just to say that I use bibtex src blocks a lot but I also use the > functionality found in ol-bibtex.el for creating bib files from > org properties. Yes ol-bibtex.el is good but doesn't fit my purpose. I use non-standard bib fields - such as "illustrations", "binding", "condition", etc. - that are not in available properties of ol-bibtex.el. Thanks again for your help - I feel I understand things a little better. Colin. Colin Baxter URL: http://www.Colin-Baxter.com --------------------------------------------------------------------- GnuPG fingerprint: 68A8 799C 0230 16E7 BF68 2A27 BBFA 2492 91F5 41C8 --------------------------------------------------------------------- Since mathematicians have invaded the theory of relativity, I do not understand it myself. A. Einstein