- The \bibliographystyle and \bibliography commands are at the end of the
document.
- The question is about how to get Org mode to do the whole job, as there
is a command for it which is supposed to do exactly that but it doesn't.


On Sat, May 18, 2013 at 4:28 AM, Yury Bulka <yurk...@gmail.com> wrote:

> I believe you should put the \bibliographystyle and \bibliography commands
> at the end of the document before \end{document}.
>
> Next, to compile the file, you should first run pdflatex YOURFILE.tex,
> then run bibtex YOURFILE (without extension or with .aux), and then again
> pdflatex, possibly twice.
>
> This can be done by first exporting to LaTeX and then compiling manually.
>
> I think you can also adjust the variable `org-latex-to-pdf-process' in
> order to include a bibtex command (not tested yet) in the org pdf export
> procedure.
>
> Good luck!
>
>
> 2013/5/18 Omid <omidl...@gmail.com>
>
>> I have posted a question to tex.stackexchange.com on "How to get BibTeX
>> to work with Org mode LaTeX export?" Here is a link to it:
>> http://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/114864/how-to-get-bibtex-to-work-with-org-mode-latex-export.
>> I thought this mailing list might be the best place to ask for help about
>> it. Thanks in advance for your time.
>>
>> For ease of reference, here is the question again:
>>
>> I am trying to get Emacs (24.3.1), Org-mode (8.0.3, from ELPA) and BibTeX
>> (from TeX Live 2012) to work together. I have followed the instructions
>> under the Bibliography section in
>> http://orgmode.org/worg/org-tutorials/org-latex-export.html but after
>> exporting the document to LaTeX, compiling to PDF, and opening the result
>> (with key sequence C-c C-e l o in the latest Org mode) I see a question
>> mark instead of a citation (i.e., [?]) which means that the reference was
>> not resolved by LaTeX. In fact, checking the Org PDF LaTeX Output buffer, I
>> see the following warning:
>>
>> LaTeX Warning: Citation `Tappert77' on page 3 undefined on input line 43.
>>
>> No file org-bib-test.bbl.
>> [3] (.//org-bib-test.aux)
>>
>> LaTeX Warning: There were undefined references.
>>
>> It looked to me that probably Org-mode was looking for a .bib file with
>> the same base name as the .org file but renaming the .bib file and updating
>> the \bibliography line did not solve the problem.
>>
>> Here are two minimal .org and .bib files that together can be used to
>> reproduce the behavior described above:
>>
>> org-bib-test.org
>>
>> * Tests
>> ** Test1 slide
>>    - This is test1 \cite{Tappert77}.
>>
>> \bibliographystyle{plain}
>> \bibliography{org-bib-test-refs}
>>
>> The following, using #+LATEX_HEADER, gives the same result:
>>
>> org-bib-test.org
>>
>> #+LATEX_HEADER: \bibliographystyle{plain}
>> #+LATEX_HEADER: \bibliography{org-bib-test-refs}
>>
>> * Tests
>> ** Test1 slide
>>    - This is test1 \cite{Tappert77}.
>>
>> org-bib-test-refs.bib
>>
>> @incollection {Tappert77,
>> AUTHOR = {Tappert, Fred D.},
>> TITLE = {The parabolic approximation method},
>> BOOKTITLE = {Wave propagation and underwater acoustics ({W}orkshop,
>>               {M}ystic, {C}onn., 1974)},
>> PAGES = {224--287. Lecture Notes in Phys., Vol. 70},
>> PUBLISHER = {Springer},
>> ADDRESS = {Berlin},
>> YEAR = {1977},
>> MRCLASS = {76.41 (86.41)},
>> }
>>
>> Currently I am using the following ugly hack to get the references
>> resolved: I generate the .bbl file from the .bib file (using a minimal .tex
>> file) and then I \include the resulting .bbl file directly in my .org file.
>> This is rather cumbersome and of course requires that I regenerate the .bbl
>> file every time I make a change to the .bib file. Although this process can
>> be automated in Emacs by writing a lisp function to encapsulate these
>> actions, I'd rather solve the problem than streamline a hack.
>>
>> I have checked the .tex file generated by Org mode. It does have the
>> following necessary lines exported in it:
>>
>> \bibliographystyle{plain}
>> \bibliography{org-bib-test-refs}
>>
>> -Omid
>>
>
>

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