Paul Rudin writes: > Alan L Tyree <alanty...@gmail.com> writes: > > >> My real problem is that I don't know how to generate the multiple indexes >> that >> I need if I use org mode. Everything else is easy. Any potential solution >> that >> I see involves adding lots more markup, but if I do that I might as well >> stick >> with LaTeX. > > I'm not sure that needs to be the case. I don't use org-mode for LaTeX > documents, but a bit of boiler-plate to generate the indexes shouldn't > be too tricky. A good starting point is the manual for biblatex oscola > package - which shows you to get your case, statute etc. tables with > relatively little effort. > <http://mirror.ox.ac.uk/sites/ctan.org/macros/latex/contrib/biblatex-contrib/oscola/oscola.pdf>
Oscola is good and approaches the problem by maintaining a bibtex database of cases. I maintain a plain text file of my cases and retrieve them with a custom built function. I'm not sure that the resulting markup in the manuscript is much more readable with Oscola, but I need to look into it further. Thanks for the tip. -- Alan L Tyree http://www2.austlii.edu.au/~alan Tel: 04 2748 6206 sip:172...@iptel.org