...and of course, immediately sending, I noticed a small problem in the grammar:
Richard Lawrence <richard.lawre...@berkeley.edu> writes: > - A PARENTHETICAL-CITATION is either a SIMPLE-PARENTHETICAL or a > CITATION-LIST whose first INDIVIDUAL-REFERENCE is a > PARENTHESIZED-KEY > - An IN-TEXT-CITATION is either a SIMPLE-IN-TEXT, or a > CITATION-LIST whose first INDIVIDUAL-REFERENCE is a BARE-KEY. In both of these clauses, `INDIVIDUAL-REFERENCE is' should be `INDIVIDUAL-REFERENCE contains', so that they read: - A PARENTHETICAL-CITATION is either a SIMPLE-PARENTHETICAL or a CITATION-LIST whose first INDIVIDUAL-REFERENCE contains a PARENTHESIZED-KEY - An IN-TEXT-CITATION is either a SIMPLE-IN-TEXT, or a CITATION-LIST whose first INDIVIDUAL-REFERENCE contains a BARE-KEY. Also, I wanted to mention that people may want to start by reading the examples in the proposal, which are under the heading ``Examples of main citation syntax''. (There are further, unofficial examples under the heading ``Syntax for extensions''.) Best, Richard