[OS X TeX] Who is using biblatex?

Nathan Paxton napaxton at fas.harvard.edu
Thu Dec 2 16:21:26 CET 2010


	I note that the biblatex style file I want to use has both magazine and periodical types. So alternatively, is there a way to assign an alias in the older BibTeX and bst style files (so that I can still use my old hand-cooked .bst when I need to)?

Best,
-Nathan A. Paxton 
----------
Nathan A. Paxton, Ph.D.
Lecturer
Dept. of Government, Harvard University

napaxton AT fas DOT harvard DOT edu
http://www.gov.harvard.edu/people/nathan-paxton
========================================================
Stand up for hope, faith, love
But while I'm getting over certainty
Stop helping God across the road like a little old lady.
	—U2
========================================================

On 2 Dec 2010, at 10:17 AM, Nathan Paxton wrote:

> 	I just tried biblatex again (tried it a while back, but it didn't yet have a Chicago author-date style; but now it does!). It seems to work beautifully.
> 
> 	One question. The style file has a database type called "magazine" (for the obvious and eponymous). My .bib file has this called "periodical", as I had altered a .bst style to deal with newspaper and magazine articles previously. Is there a way to tell biblatex that when it encounters the "periodical" type it should treat those as "magazine"? (An alias of sorts is what I'm looking for...)
> 
> Best,
> -Nathan A. Paxton 
> ----------
> Nathan A. Paxton, Ph.D.
> Lecturer
> Dept. of Government, Harvard University
> 
> napaxton AT fas DOT harvard DOT edu
> http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~napaxton
> =========================================================
> Outside of a dog, a book is man's best friend. Inside of a dog, it's too dark to read.
> 	—Mark Twain
> (It's kind of cramped, too.)
> =========================================================
> 
> On 29 Nov 2010, at 11:14 PM, Simon Spiegel wrote:
> 
>> 
>> On 30.11.2010, at 04:19, Alan Munn wrote:
>> 
>>> On Nov 29, 2010, at 9:56 PM, Alan T Litchfield wrote:
>>> 
>>>> Hi Alan
>>>> 
>>>> On 30/11/2010, at 3:46 PM, Alan Munn wrote:
>>>> 
>>>>> 
>>>>> 
>>>>> Hi, I've been gradually moving to biblatex over the past couple of years.  I haven't found any direct incompatibilities with bib files, but my needs are pretty pedestrian, so maybe there are weird reference types that I'm unaware of.  Biblatex does add a bunch of fields, but the standard ones are all there, so I think you only need to add new field types on an as-needed basis.
>>>>> 
>>>>> Have you tried taking an existing document and just using biblatex-apa to do the references?
>>>>> 
>>>>> Alan
>>>> 
>>>> That is the general impression I am getting and that moving possibly provides greater advantages in the long term.
>>> 
>>> Yes, I think so too.
>>>> 
>>>> I am actually looking at a specific document that includes sound and motion picture references which are not handled well by bibtex styles. It is these that have prompted me to look at biblatex.
>>> 
>>> I don't know if Simon Spiegel is still reading this list, but he writes about film, and has been using biblatex for a long time now.    If he's still reading he might comment.
>> 
>> He is reading this. ;)
>> 
>> I've been using biblatex since about version 0.3 and I've just finished my second book which makes heavy use of it. To make this short: As long as there isn't a very specific reason why you have to use traditional bibtex, switch to biblatex – the sooner the better. Biblatex is so much more capable than traditional bibtex, there's really little reason not to use it. It's not only the additional fields, it's also the fact that everyone with average knowledge of LaTeX can easily adapt his own style (something which has been almost impossible with traditional bibtex) and that many of the traditional limitations of bibtex simply don't exist anymore with biblatex. Also, biblatex's manual is simply superb.
>> 
>> As for sound and film references: It does of course depend on your needs whether the available styles are good enough for you. But even if they're not, the big plus of biblatex is that you can easily adapt an existing style to your specific needs (I can send you my style, but since it's heavily geared toward German speaking academia, it might be of little use for you).
>> 
>> Also, if you use biblatex, it's better not to use bibtex (the program) or bibtex8 respectively, but biber to do the sorting. It handles UTF8, doesn't know the memory limitations of bibtex and is the way biblatex will go in the future. A ready-to-use binary for OSX can be downloaded here: http://sourceforge.net/projects/biblatex-biber/files/biblatex-biber/current/binaries/OSX_Intel/biber.tar.gz/download
>> 
>> 
>> Simon
>> 
>> --
>> Simon Spiegel
>> Steinhaldenstr. 50
>> 8002 Zürich
>> 
>> Telephon: ++41 44 451 5334
>> Mobophon: ++41 76 459 6039
>> 
>> http://www.simifilm.ch
>> 
>> „I know that human beings and fish can coexist peacefully.“ George W. Bush
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
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> 




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