Eric S Fraga <e.fr...@ucl.ac.uk> writes: > On Monday, 9 Mar 2015 at 07:49, Thomas S. Dye wrote: > > [...] > >> Do you have a use for the shortcuts? I doubt I'd use them. > > Wouldn't the shortcut be the most attractive to use generally unless you > have need for the extra capability of the full [cite:] syntax? > > The vast majority of my citations, e.g. in a paper I am writing right > now in org, are of the form [[cite:blah-etal-2010a]] and it would be > much easier to type @blah-etal-2010a. I seldom, if ever, have pre or > post text in my citations. > > Or have I misunderstood something in this *very* long thread? (which I > have been following as a lurker so far... :)
No, you have it right and clearly have a use for shortcuts. If you want to type shortcut citations yourself, then the choice is either to accept some kind of terminator, e.g. {}, or a restriction that citation keys not end in punctuation characters. It's been years since I've actually typed in a citation. Reftex and Ebib both do a flawless job and I rely on them completely now. Shortcuts aren't useful in this work flow. All the best, Tom -- Thomas S. Dye http://www.tsdye.com