John Kitchin <jkitc...@andrew.cmu.edu> writes: > Rasmus writes: > >> Nicolas Goaziou <m...@nicolasgoaziou.fr> writes: >> >>> Another option is to mimic custom links, if that's what you're thinking >>> of, which means to store every user-defined keyword in a variable and >>> build a regexp out of it. I dislike it even more because the document is >>> not portable anymore, as it requires you to share your custom keywords. >> >> So, the (opinionated) useful defaults in biblatex are: >> cite(s), parencite(s), footcite(s), texcite(s), fullcite, >> footfullcite, nocite >> >> Citation types for extracting parts: >> citeauthor, citetitle, citeyear, citedate, citeurl, > > If citenum was also in that list, then I agree. It is not that likely > there is little need for custom style.
Ok, sorry I didn't check the natbib manual carefully. AFAIK you get numbers with biblatex without any author-year options so: \cite{k}, \parencite{k} → [Num] \textcite{k} → A [Num] Is this similar to \numcite? From natbib is seems to be intended for people who use author-year, but still wants numbers. Is that correct? —Rasmus -- Vote for proprietary math!