Hi Nicolas, first: thank you for all the work, especially for thinking of documentation for end users. My biggest struggle with the current org (and emacs) documentation is the lack of end-to-end examples. This makes it incredibly difficult to get things working. It often is like „this is a big puzzle, some pieces are in other boxes and we don’t provide a picture of how the final puzzle will look like“. The documentation often makes sense once I get it running, though . But this is to late.
This being the motivation, I would greatly appreciate the following: ——— snip ———- Consider the following minimal viable example where an org file with one bibtex file is rendered to pdf and html. This is the BibTex file #+begin_example bibtex …. #+end_example This is the org file #+begin_example org …. #+end_example and this is the rendered html/Latex - picture 1 - screenshot 2 This has been achieved with the following minimal configuration: #+begin_example elisp …. #+end_example As you can see in line 42 the … etc, etc If you would like to use two bibtex files you would need to change … #+begin_example elisp …. ; change line 14 in the sample for one file like this: (…) … #+end_example ——- snap ——- That kind of documentation would have made many, many hours of frustrating „search in google/github for a solution someone else has found“ and replace it with „wow that was actually quite beginner friendly!“. Pictures also make it much easier to visualize what is actually achieved. Cheers Jens > On 8. Jul 2021, at 02:18, Nicolas Goaziou <m...@nicolasgoaziou.fr> wrote: > > Hello, > > I think the "wip-cite-new" branch is in good shape now. As > a consequence, I'd like to merge it tomorrow. > > It is documented, but the documentation is scattered across the various > "oc" libraries, and some threads in the mailing list. I'll do a summary > here, from a user point of view. > > --8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8--- > Basically, in order to use it, you need to first set-up a bibliography, > using one or more "bibliography" keywords. <C-c '> on such a keyword > visits the related file. Out of the box, Org supports JSON-CSL and > BibTeX (or biblatex) bibliographies. > > Then, citations can be inserted with the following syntax: > > [cite/style:common prefix ;prefix @key suffix; ... ; common suffix] > > Spaces are meaningful except those after the initial colon and before > the closing bracket. > > Every part of the syntax is optional, except the brackets, "cite" and > the colon. Also the citation must contain at least a key. So its minimal > form is: > > [cite:@key] > > The "style" part is detailed below, in the part related to export. > > Org can insert or edit citations with <C-c C-x @> (and delete them with > <C-u C-c C-x @>), follow them with <C-c C-o>, fontify them, and export > them. These four actions (insert, follow, activate, and export) are > called capabilities. Libraries responsible for these capabilities are > called citation processors. > > You can select one citation processor for each capability, independently > on the others, through the following variables: > > - org-cite-activate-processor > - org-cite-export-processors > - org-cite-follow-processor > - org-cite-insert-processor > > Out of the box, Org provides the "basic" (in "oc-basic.el") processor > for all of these tasks. It also boasts processors dedicated for export: > "csl", "natbib" and "biblatex". > > During export, output for citations is controlled by their style, which > is an Org label that the export processor may recognize and associate to > a specific display, or fall-back to a default style (called "nil"). For > example, most processors support "noauthor" and "text" styles. > > Some styles can accept a variant, with the syntax "style/variant". > Again, it's up to the processor to associate it to a specific display. > Common variants include "bare", "caps" or "full". They also accept > short-hands, like "b", "c" and "f". Please refer to the export > processors' libraries ("oc-basic.el", "oc-csl.el", …) for more information. > > It is possible to define a default style for a whole document (with > "cite_export"), or for all documents (with `org-cite-export-processors'). > > References are displayed with the "print_bibliography" keyword. It is > possible to add parameters to its value, as some export processors could > make use of them. > --8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8--- > > Please let me know if there are any objections to the merge. > > Regards, > -- > Nicolas Goaziou >