> >> There is no question in my mind that some people will want to extend >> this, as there are just too few of the latex citation commands >> supported out of the box, especially for biblatex users (who used that >> because of limitations in bibtex ;). > > Do you think there are important commands that I missed? I did try to > make sure that all the major distinctions in biblatex were covered, > though I ignored some more esoteric things like smartcite and volcite.
I think the most common ones are there. It is just that over a decade in academia has taught me that there are always people that do things another way, for some reason, including to be difficult ;) > So I suggest we let a thousand flowers bloom, and see what people come > up with, rather than trying to cut down on the verbosity up front. Also fine with me. > Hmm, OK. Let's discuss this in another thread. > >> So, overall, I am on the positive side of zero. > > Haha, leave it to a physical scientist to turn a discrete interval into > a continuous one... ;) Indeed! I could have gone with +i for I imagine it might work ;) > > Best, > Richard -- Professor John Kitchin Doherty Hall A207F Department of Chemical Engineering Carnegie Mellon University Pittsburgh, PA 15213 412-268-7803 @johnkitchin http://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu