Jony Hudson writes:
> On Thursday, 15 May 2014 14:58:50 UTC+1, Phillip Lord wrote:
>>
>>
>> Again, based on the dubious ID that an DOI "makes things citable".
>>
>> A URL is already citable!
>>
>
> Well, there's no shortage of broken links out there to suggest that people
> have trouble keepin
On Thursday, 15 May 2014 14:58:50 UTC+1, Phillip Lord wrote:
>
>
> Again, based on the dubious ID that an DOI "makes things citable".
>
> A URL is already citable!
>
Well, there's no shortage of broken links out there to suggest that people
have trouble keeping content associated with stable
Giovanni Gherdovich writes:
>> For the purposes of academic publications
>> (in areas well outside of SIGPLAN and such),
>> are there any preferred citations for Clojure and EDN?
>
> loosely related to this old thread, today I have read that github
> has worked out a way to stick a DOI (
> http:/
Hello,
On Wed, Apr 23, 2014 at 4:42 AM, wrote:
>
> For the purposes of academic publications
> (in areas well outside of SIGPLAN and such),
> are there any preferred citations for Clojure and EDN?
loosely related to this old thread, today I have read that github
has worked out a way to stick a D
Ben Wolfson writes:
>> The idea that you can't cite websites is a conceit that ensures that
>> academics continue to spend a 1000s of pounds a paper on puplication
>> costs, when you can achieve much the same with a blog, some metadata and
>> archive.org.
>>
>> Ah, that was good, I feel better no
Here's a good citation for Clojure:
http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1408682
Thanks,
Ambrose
On Wed, Apr 23, 2014 at 1:46 PM, Christopher Small wrote:
> I'm not disagreeing with you. When you're talking about a language, and
> none of the papers specifically points to the language as a whole -
I'm not disagreeing with you. When you're talking about a language, and
none of the papers specifically points to the language as a whole - that's
fine. But in the case of specific software packages/programs, I think it is
often better to cite a paper if it exists. For example, if I write a paper
t
On Wed, Apr 23, 2014 at 9:44 AM, Phillip Lord
wrote:
>
> The idea that you can't cite websites is a conceit that ensures that
> academics continue to spend a 1000s of pounds a paper on puplication
> costs, when you can achieve much the same with a blog, some metadata and
> archive.org.
>
> Ah, tha
Actually, I am not sure I would agree. For example, there are quite a
few publications on Scala but most of the academic publications are
about something; so, the semantics of it's type system, or the blending
of function and OO or so on. So, which should you cite? Well, you could
pick the languag
I have never had to cite Clojure, but I have cited other software packages
that didn't have publications. In general, if there is an actual academic
publication, it's best to cite that. Frequently there isn't of course, and
in those cases I've cited the web address.
Cheers
Chris
On Wednesd
Cite the URL. It's the correct identifier, it's got the relevant data on
it, and it's archived in archive.org.
If the journal editor or other academic tells you that you need a
"proper" academic reference, just ignore them, because they are wrong.
Phil
writes:
> For the purposes of academic p
I'm not sure exactly what you're looking for, but the EDN spec is
https://github.com/edn-format/edn and was written by Rich Hickey. Seems
like that is what you should cite.
I don't know what it would mean to "cite" Clojure - it is software, written
by many people over a period of years. Rich Hi
Yes, Bibtex is ugly, but guess what - you newer need to write a single
line. You find a reference in google scholar, copy paste a reference
into your reference file and it works.
Please call Google and ask for another, more lispy export format in
their Google Scholar. Additionally, if you have to
On Thu, Oct 1, 2009 at 1:17 PM, John Harrop wrote:
> On Thu, Oct 1, 2009 at 3:42 PM, Dragan Djuric wrote:
>>
>> I usualy cite Rich's conference paper and Stuart's book.
>>
>> @conference{hickey2008clojure,
>> title={{The Clojure programming language}},
>> author={Hickey, R.},
>> booktitle={Pr
On Oct 1, 10:17 pm, John Harrop wrote:
> > @conference{hickey2008clojure,
> > title={{The Clojure programming language}},
> > author={Hickey, R.},
> > booktitle={Proceedings of the 2008 symposium on Dynamic languages},
> > year={2008},
> > organization={ACM New York, NY, USA}
> > }
>
> Eeeu
On Thu, Oct 1, 2009 at 3:42 PM, Dragan Djuric wrote:
>
> I usualy cite Rich's conference paper and Stuart's book.
>
> @conference{hickey2008clojure,
> title={{The Clojure programming language}},
> author={Hickey, R.},
> booktitle={Proceedings of the 2008 symposium on Dynamic languages},
> yea
I usualy cite Rich's conference paper and Stuart's book.
@conference{hickey2008clojure,
title={{The Clojure programming language}},
author={Hickey, R.},
booktitle={Proceedings of the 2008 symposium on Dynamic languages},
year={2008},
organization={ACM New York, NY, USA}
}
This paper so
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