Juergen Spitzmueller wrote:
> Jeremy Wells wrote:
>> To properly adhere to this style, there is a need for shortened forms of
>> subsequent citations and/or the use of "ibid" for repeated citations,
>> none of which are supported by any Bibtex style file.
>
> Not true. Jurabib supports all of thi
On Thu, 15 Jun 2006, Jeremy Wells wrote:
To reiterate, my main issue is with bibliography/citation formatting. I
looked briefly at RefDB and rejected it because the documentation
specifically said:
Has this changed? If not, I don't think RefDB will solve the problem.
Jeremy,
No, it hasn'
gt; To: "Jeremy Wells" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: Re: Bibliography/citation formatting issues
> Date: Thu, 15 Jun 2006 06:35:00 -0700 (PDT)
>
>
> On Thu, 15 Jun 2006, Jeremy Wells wrote:
>
> > I have now come full circle and am again looking at Lyx in combina
On Thu, 15 Jun 2006, Jeremy Wells wrote:
I have now come full circle and am again looking at Lyx in combination with
JabRef. In my assessment, the biggest weakness of Lyx and Latex is problems
with supporting different bibliography and citation styles. In my field
(historic preservation), which
Jeremy Wells wrote:
> To properly adhere to this style, there is a need for shortened forms of
> subsequent citations and/or the use of "ibid" for repeated citations, none
> of which are supported by any Bibtex style file.
Not true. Jurabib supports all of this (www.jurabib.org).
Jürgen
Hi,
2006-06-15 08:19 -0400, Jeremy Wells:
> Moreover, most of my field's journals require formatting in the Chicago
> A/Turabian-like style with citations as endnotes
> or footnotes. To properly adhere to this style, there is a need for shortened
> forms of subsequent citations and/or the
> us
In 2003, I evaluated several solutions for an academic word processing environment--e.g., word processor and a
bibliography manager. I seriously considered Lyx, but ended up using MS Word and Endnote.
I have now come full circle and am again looking at Lyx in combination with JabRef. In my asses