[OS X TeX] Bibliography: pedestrian way works too...
Bruno Voisin
bvoisin at mac.com
Wed Jan 12 19:01:25 CET 2005
Le 12 janv. 05, à 18:22, Douglas Hemmick a écrit :
> Nobody likes the "pedestrian" way for bibliographies...?
>
> You don't need a separate program like BibTeX, or a separate
> data file, but just put your bibliographic listings inside of
> the actual .tex file itself.
That's what I do. At the time natbib and other similar customizable
bibliographical packages weren't available, and the only solution was
to explore Nelson Beebe's archive of bibliographical styles and adapt
what was there, I found no available style would provide the exact
presentations -- of author-date type in my field -- that were required
by specific scientific journals (complicated rules involving, for
example, no comma between author and year, commas between successive
years, semi-columns between different papers, with variations depending
on context).
Then I turned to doing everything manually, writing the references in
full in the body of the documents, and doing cut-and-paste and editing
from files where I had collected a large number of references. I have
always had the impression that, for somebody writing, say, not more
than 4 or 5 documents including bibliographies per year, it was
actually more time-consuming to learn BibTeX and get it to produce a
specific bibliographical style, than to just write things manually
oneself and pay a lot of attention to chasing misprints and omissions.
That said, with the advent of tools like BibDesk (and previously
HyperBibTeX) for managing references with a GUI, with the existence of
customizable styles like natbib, and possibly with the possibility to
import directly references in BibTeX format from databases and
scientific publishers' sites, and possibly with the generalized use of
DOIs (Document Object Identifiers), that statement may very well become
obsolete.
FWIW,
Bruno Voisin
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