* bibtex bibliography exported to HTML
@ 2012-01-04 21:31 Stephen J. Barr
2012-01-04 22:35 ` Nick Dokos
2012-01-04 22:50 ` Christian Moe
0 siblings, 2 replies; 6+ messages in thread
From: Stephen J. Barr @ 2012-01-04 21:31 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: emacs-orgmode
Hello,
I am using org-mode to work on some outlines of papers. I will
eventually export to LaTeX and edit the .tex itself, but during this
initial phase it is nice to have it in HTML form so I can send it in
an email. My question is, I want to include bibliography entries the
way I would with LaTeX, but then have a decent looking bibliography
when I export to HTML. Is this behaviour supported, and if so, how do
I do it?
Thank you in advance for the help.
Best regards,
-stephen
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: bibtex bibliography exported to HTML
2012-01-04 21:31 bibtex bibliography exported to HTML Stephen J. Barr
@ 2012-01-04 22:35 ` Nick Dokos
2012-01-04 22:58 ` Christian Moe
2012-01-04 22:50 ` Christian Moe
1 sibling, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread
From: Nick Dokos @ 2012-01-04 22:35 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Stephen J. Barr; +Cc: nicholas.dokos, emacs-orgmode
Stephen J. Barr <stephenjbarr@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I am using org-mode to work on some outlines of papers. I will
> eventually export to LaTeX and edit the .tex itself, but during this
> initial phase it is nice to have it in HTML form so I can send it in
> an email. My question is, I want to include bibliography entries the
> way I would with LaTeX, but then have a decent looking bibliography
> when I export to HTML. Is this behaviour supported, and if so, how do
> I do it?
>
There is some info on the mailing list, e.g.
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/11578
The package mentioned there, org-exp-bibtex.el is in contrib/lisp.
I have never used it, so I cannot say how well it works though.
Nick
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: bibtex bibliography exported to HTML
2012-01-04 21:31 bibtex bibliography exported to HTML Stephen J. Barr
2012-01-04 22:35 ` Nick Dokos
@ 2012-01-04 22:50 ` Christian Moe
2012-01-04 23:39 ` Thomas S. Dye
1 sibling, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread
From: Christian Moe @ 2012-01-04 22:50 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Stephen J. Barr; +Cc: emacs-orgmode
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 5584 bytes --]
On 1/4/12 10:31 PM, Stephen J. Barr wrote:
> I want to include bibliography entries the
> way I would with LaTeX, but then have a decent looking bibliography
> when I export to HTML. Is this behaviour supported, and if so, how do
> I do it?
Hi,
It's not currently supported, but I have some pretty raw code lying
around from last summer to do just that. I'd be obliged if you'd test
drive the attached Org-cite.el.
Be warned, though, that even if it works for you, you'll probably want
support and bugfixes that I have very little time for at the moment,
being very busy with other work.
This version depends on bibtex for the formatting, so you need a
working LaTeX installation. When your document's changed, before you
export to HTML (or ODT), you need to first do a latex export and run
bibtex on it. Instructions follow below.
Yours,
Christian Moe
----
ORG-CITE
Org-cite formats bibliographic citations and reference lists in
Org-mode documents for export with non-LaTeX backends (HTML, ODT,
plain text, Docbook...). Citations are hyperlinked to references.
Org-cite is /not/ mature for use in a "production environment." It
is intended to come in handy when you can deliver your final product
as LaTeX/PDF, but need to share drafts with full references in other
formats (HTML, ODT) with others.
Org-cite currently requires BibTeX for the formatting, so you still
need a working LaTeX installation. Org-cite via BibTeX aims to produce
a /reasonably close approximation/ to the formatting you get from a
LaTeX export with a few of the most widely used BibTeX packages and
styles (plain, natbib, and apacite for now). It does not /and will
not/ aim at identical results to any package/style, nor to support all
packages/styles out there.
Future versions will aim to include other formatters beside
BibTeX.
Org-cite can read raw latex cite macros including the most
usual subsets supported by the natbib and apacite packages: with
long and short authorlists, pre-notes, post-notes (locators), and
multiple citations, e.g. the natbib cite
: The cow jumped over the moon, \citet[see
e.g.][p.11,p.6]{goose2010,thumb1999,thumb2003}.
should come out as something like
: The cow jumped over the moon, see e.g. Goose et al. (2010); Thumb
(1999; 2003).
Future versions will also support some version of the custom Org cite
links preferred by some users.
Setting the command org-cite-format as a pre-processing hook for
export is always safe, since changes are done to a temporary copy of
your document. Doing org-cite-format directly in your working buffer
is possible (and helpful for debugging), but risks permanently
overwriting your cites if you then save without reverting. Please
always back up before you try this.
* Installation:
Make sure you have a working LaTeX/BibTeX installation. Place
org-cite.el somewhere on your load-path. Evaluate the following, or
add permanently to your .emacs:
#+begin_src emacs-lisp
(require 'org-cite)
(add-hook 'org-export-preprocess-hook 'org-cite-format)
#+end_src
Instead of adding the hook on startup, you can also toggle export
behavior with `M-x org-cite-toggle'.
* Use:
Org-cite does not automatically detect what package you are using, so
you need to tell it. The current options are natbib, apacite, or nil
for plain.
: (setq org-cite-bibtex-package 'apacite)
You also need to tell org-cite how to format your citations. Org-cite
gives you more options than some latex packages, but some of these may
give nonsensical results. The current options are =author-date=,
=numeric=, =notes= (similar to numeric, but inserted as Org
footnotes), and =text= (full citation in text). I recommend sticking
to the first three for now.
: (setq org-cite-method 'author-date)
If you only use one method, you may want to keep these in your .emacs.
To export foo.org to foo.odt with references:
- First export foo.org to LaTeX and process it until you get the
output you want, e.g.
: latex foo
: bibtex foo
: latex foo
: pdflatex foo
This produces =foo.aux= and =foo.bbl= files needed by org-cite.
- Make sure org-export-preprocess-hook includes org-cite-format (see
above), and that your org-cite-bibtex-package and org-cite-method
settings agree with your LaTeX settings.
- Export foo.org to ODT or other target format.
If things go wrong, org-cite may have choked while trying to cull
curly braces from your bibitems. You can troubleshoot this by looking
at the bibitem at point in the =org-cite-temp-bbl= buffer, which is
left open if org-cite ends prematurely (you need to kill this buffer
before trying again).
* Known problems
Org-cite handles many special (non-ascii) characters as represented in
LaTeX, but not all; and it is picky when it comes to how these special
characters are written. Some editing of your .bib file or at least the
.bbl produced by bibtexing may be necessary. For example, it will
recognize \"{a} as ä, but will not recognize \"a or {\"a}. There are
two ways you can solve this: either conform your .bib file to
org-cite's requirements, or conform org-cite to your .bib file by
customizing org-cite-latex-chars-utf8 to include \"a as well.
For some reason I have not pinned down, a doubling of the bibliography
section has been known to occur with some documents.
* Reporting bugs:
A bug report should ideally include all of the following:
- What you expected to see, and what you got
- The files foo.org, foo.aux and foo.bbl
- If export failed, traceback from the debugger and the contents of
the org-cite-temp-bbl buffer
[-- Attachment #2: org-cite.el --]
[-- Type: text/plain, Size: 35654 bytes --]
;;; org-cite --- format Org-mode bibliographic references
;; Copyright (C) 2011 Christian Moe
;; Author: Christian Moe <mail at christianmoe dot com>
;; Keywords: citations, references, bibliography, wp
;; Version: 0.1 alpha
;; This file is not part of GNU Emacs.
;; Org-cite is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
;; the Free Software Foundation; either version 3, or (at your option)
;; any later version.
;; Org-cite is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
;; GNU General Public License for more details.
;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
;; along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
;;; Commentary:
;;; Code:
(defun org-cite-format ()
"Dispatch formatting if there is at least one cite, and the
export target is not LaTeX."
(goto-char (point-min))
(when (re-search-forward org-cite-latex-cite-re nil t)
(unless (equal org-export-current-backend 'latex)
(org-cite-format-with-bibtex))))
(defun org-cite-toggle ()
"Toggle use of org-cite-format on export."
(interactive)
(if (member 'org-cite-format org-export-preprocess-hook)
(remove-hook 'org-export-preprocess-hook 'org-cite-format)
(add-hook 'org-export-preprocess-hook 'org-cite-format)))
(defvar org-cite-strings
()
"Plist of strings, returned by org-cite-str. Set at runtime
depending on how we're formatting.")
(defvar org-cite-default-strings
'(:loc-sep ", "
:nobreak " " ; (char-to-string ?\240)
:and "and" ; e.g. before last author name
:et-al "et al." ; in place of full list of co-authors
:number "no."
:p "p."
:pp "pp."
:in "in"
:ed "ed."
:eds "eds."
:ed-by "ed."
:edn "ed." ; abbreviation for edition, e.g. in "(2nd ed.)"
:no-date "n.d."
)
"Default strings to use when formatting citations and bibliographies.")
(defun org-cite-str (key)
"Gettext function for org-cite. Looks up org-cite-strings for the
string corresponding to KEY."
(plist-get org-cite-strings key))
(defvar org-cite-alphabet
"abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz"
"String containing the alphabet in lower-case letters. You can
customize this if you need a different alphabet, default is
English.")
(defvar org-cite-months
'("January" "February" "March" "April" "May" "June"
"July" "August" "September" "October" "November" "December"))
(defvar org-cite-months-abbrev
'("Jan" "Feb" "Mar" "Apr" "May" "Jun"
"Jul" "Aug" "Sep" "Oct" "Nov" "Dec"))
(defun org-cite-num-to-letter (num)
"Helper function that returns letter number NUM from the list
a, b, c... NUM can be numeric or string; if NUM is nil, the empty
string is returned."
(when (stringp num) (setq num (string-to-number num)))
(if num
(char-to-string (aref (vconcat org-cite-alphabet) (1- num)))
""))
(defvar org-cite-method 'numeric
"The basic reference method to use. Possible values:
- author-date: e.g. citations formatted as `(Brown, 2006)',
with alphabetically ordered reference list at end
- numeric: numeric references, e.g. citations like (1), and
reference list with items prefixed in same way.
- notes: inserted as Org footnotes. Note that locator
information is currently lost.
- text: inserted as full text.")
(defvar org-cite-formatter 'bibtex
"The reference-formatting backend to use. Currently bibtex is
the only option.")
(defun org-cite-replace-in-buffer (subst)
"Make simple substitutions in the buffer. SUBST is an alist of
regexps matched to replacements. Goes beyond
format-replace-strings in that replacements can be strings,
symbols, or expressions."
(let (rep)
(while subst
(goto-char (point-min))
(while (re-search-forward (car (car subst)) nil t)
(setq rep (cdr (car subst)))
(replace-match
(cond
((symbolp rep) ; replacement is a symbol, get value
(symbol-value rep))
((and (listp rep) (functionp (car rep))) ; replacement is a function,
(eval rep)) ; evaluate it
((stringp rep) rep)) ; replacement is a string, return it
t)) ; replace with fixed-case
(setq subst (cdr subst)))))
(defvar org-cite-final-substitutions
'(
;; (" ()" . "") ; empty parens, e.g. because of missing journal number
;; (", )" . ")") ; nothing after comma, e.g. missing month info
("/(" . "/ (")) ; give italics space to breathe before issue number
"These are just dirty fixes to problems left by other dirty fixes.
TODO: clean fixes.")
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
;;; BibTeX-specific ;;;
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
;; A note on LaTeX regexps
;;
;; To match LaTeX command arguments, I have used
;; "{\\([^}]+\\)}". That's fine e.g. in org-cite-latex-cite-re and
;; bibitem searches, which only look for a citekey. However, this
;; fails if the argument itself contains curly braces. org-cite relies
;; on cleaning those up first. It will not always succeed. A better
;; approach is needed.
(defvar org-cite-latex-cite-re
"\\\\\\(.*?cite.*?\\)\\(\\[\\(.+?\\)\\]\\)?\\(\\[\\(.+?\\)\\]\\)?{\\([^}]+\\)}"
"Regular expression to search and parse latex cites.
The match-strings are:
1 - the cite macro (cite, citet, etc.),
2 - the pre-note option (if any);
3 - its contents (e.g. `see');
4 - the post-note option (if any);
5 - its contents, usually a locator, e.g. page number;
6 - the citekey(s).
TODO: May break if there's a line-break in an option.")
(defvar org-cite-apacite-cite-re
"\\\\\\(.*?cite.*?\\)\\(<\\([^>]+\\)>\\)?\\(\\[\\([^]]+\\)\\]\\)?{\\([^}]+\\)}"
;; WAS: "\\\\\\(.*?cite.*?\\)\\(<\\(.+?\\)>\\)?\\(\\[\\(.+?\\)\\]\\)?{\\([^}]+\\)}"
"Regular expression to search and parse latex cites.
The match-strings are as for org-cite-latex-cite-re.")
(defvar org-cite-apacite-strings
'(:loc-sep ", "
:nobreak " " ; (char-to-string ?\240)
:and "&"
:et-al "et al."
:number "No."
:p "p."
:pp "pp."
:in "In"
:ed "Ed."
:eds "Eds."
:ed-by "ed."
:edn "ed."
:no-date "n.d.")
"Default strings to use with apacite.")
(defvar org-cite-bibtex-package nil
"A symbol representing the BibTeX package used. Currently
supported options are 'natbib and 'apacite.")
(defvar org-cite-bibcite-re "\\\\bibcite{\\([^}]+\\)}{\\([^}]+\\)}"
"Analytic regexp for a default bibcite.
Match-strings: 1 citekey, 2 numbering,
e.g. \\bibcite{Smith2000}{1}")
(defvar org-cite-natbib-bibcite-re
"\\\\bibcite{\\([^}]+\\)}{{\\([^}]+\\)}{\\([^}]+\\)}{{\\([^}]+\\)}}{{\\([^}]+\\)}}}"
"Analytic regexp for bibcites when using natbib.
Match-strings: 1 citekey, 2 numbering, 3 year, 4 shortened
authorlist, 5 full authorlist, e.g.
\\bibcite{Smith2000}{{1}{2000}{{Smith et al}}{{Smith, Jones and Black}}}")
(defvar org-cite-apacite-bibcite-re
"\\\\bibcite{\\([^}]+\\)}{\\\\citeauthoryear {\\(.+?\\)}{\\(.+?\\)}{{\\(.+?\\)}\\({\\\\APACexlab {{\\\\BCnt {\\([0-9]\\)}}}}\\)?}}"
;; WAS: "\\\\bibcite{\\([^}]+\\)}{\\\\citeauthoryear {\\(.+?\\)}{\\(.+?\\)}{{\\\\APACyear {\\([0-9]+\\)}}\\({\\\\APACexlab {{\\\\BCnt {\\([0-9]\\)}}}}\\)?}}"
"Analytic regexp for bibcites when using apacite.
Match-strings:
1) citekey
2) authorslong
3) authors
4) year (or no date)
5) Maybe a section with same-author-same-year distinguisher
6) Maybe a same-author-same-year distinguisher")
(defun org-cite-get-bibcites (file)
(let ((package org-cite-bibtex-package)
path bibcites bibstyle bibcite-re year key-citation)
(with-temp-buffer
(unless (file-exists-p (setq path (concat "./" file ".aux")))
(error (format "org-cite could not find %s" path)))
(insert-file-contents path)
;; Convert special characters to utf-8 representation
(setq case-fold-search nil)
(org-cite-replace-in-buffer org-cite-latex-chars-utf8)
;; Find the bibstyle
(goto-char (point-min))
(re-search-forward "\\\\bibstyle{\\([^}]+\\)}" nil t)
(setq bibstyle (match-string 1))
(when (equal package 'apacite)
;; cleanup apacite crud
(org-cite-replace-in-buffer org-cite-apacite-substitutions))
(setq bibcite-re
(cond
((equal package 'natbib)
org-cite-natbib-bibcite-re)
((equal package 'apacite)
org-cite-apacite-bibcite-re)
(t org-cite-bibcite-re))) ; close setq
(goto-char (point-min))
(while (re-search-forward bibcite-re nil t)
(setq year
(cond
((equal package 'apacite) (match-string 4))
(t (match-string 3)))) ; natbib
;; (unless (and year (string-match "[0-9]+" year)) ; FIXME - not working
;; (setq year (org-cite-str :no-date)))
(setq key-citation
(cond
;; natbib
((equal package 'natbib) ; natbib
(cons (match-string 1)
(list :num (match-string 2)
:year year
:authors (match-string 4)
:authorslong (match-string 5))))
;; apacite
((equal package 'apacite)
(cons (match-string 1)
(list :authorslong (match-string 2)
:authors (match-string 3)
:year
(concat year
;; with letter marker, if any
(if (match-string 6)
(org-cite-num-to-letter (match-string 6)))))))
;; plain
(t (cons (match-string 1) (match-string 2))))) ; close setq
(setq bibcites (cons key-citation bibcites))) ; close while
bibcites)))
(defun org-cite-format-natbib-citation (citetype citekey bibcite &optional loc pre)
"Format a citation as if using the BibTeX natbib
package. CITETYPE can be one of the following symbols: cite,
citet, citet*, citep, citep*, citealt, citealt*, citealp,
citealp*, citeauthor, citeauthor*, citeyear, citeyearpar,
nocite. BIBCITE should be a plist including :year, :authors
and :authorslong; if there are multiple citekeys, the value of
this argument is ignored and each bibcite is looked up
afresh. LOC is a note to appear at the end of the citation (aka a
post-note), usually referencing a location within the work,
e.g. page number. PRE is a note to appear before the citation,
e.g. `see'. The logical order of LOC and PRE is reversed in the
argument list because LOC is far more frequent."
(let ((citekeys (split-string citekey " ?, ?")) ; allows a single space
(locs (when loc (split-string loc " ?, ?")))
previous-authors ; lets us check if current authors same as last
citet-parens-open ; flag if we have a citet parenthesis open for more works by same authors
citation)
(setq pre (if pre (concat pre " ") ""))
;; If there are multiple works in one cite, loop through them
(while citekeys
(setq citekey (car citekeys))
(setq loc (car locs))
(setq bibcite (cdr (assoc citekey bibcites)))
(let ((authors (if (string-match "[*]" citetype)
(plist-get bibcite :authorslong)
(plist-get bibcite :authors)))
(year (plist-get bibcite :year))
(locstring (format "%s%s"
(if loc (org-cite-str :loc-sep) "")
(or loc ""))))
;; If this is not the first work, add a separator, keeping
;; track of whether we're in an open citet parenthesis
(when previous-authors
(when citet-parens-open
(unless (string= authors previous-authors)
(setq citation (concat citation ")"))
(setq citet-parens-open nil)))
(setq citation (concat citation "; ")))
;; add this work
(setq
citation
(concat
citation
(if (string= authors previous-authors)
;; if this is another work by authors already named in this citation
;; TODO Find a less extensive way to do the following!
(cond
((string-match "citet" citetype) ; matches citet and citet*
(format "[[%s][%s]]%s" citekey year locstring))
((string-match "citeauthor" citetype) ; this shouldn't happen
(format "[[%s][%s]]%s" citekey authors locstring))
((string-match "citeyearpar" citetype)
(format "[[%s][%s]]%s" citekey year locstring))
((string-match "citeyear" citetype)
(format "[[%s][%s]]%s" citekey year locstring))
((string-match "citealt" citetype)
(format "[[%s][%s]]%s" citekey year locstring))
((string-match "citealp" citetype)
(format "[[%s][%s]]%s" authors citekey year locstring))
((string-match "nocite" citetype)
"")
((string-match "cite" citetype) ; cite or citep
(format "[[%s][%s]]%s" citekey year locstring))
(t
(format "*[org-cite failed to format =%s= citation]*" citetype)))
;; else (when authors are not already named in this citation)
(cond
((string-match "citet" citetype)
(format "%s ([[%s][%s]]%s" authors citekey year locstring))
((string-match "citeauthor" citetype)
(format "[[%s][%s]]%s" citekey authors locstring))
((string-match "citeyearpar" citetype)
(format "[[%s][%s]]%s" citekey year locstring))
((string-match "citeyear" citetype)
(format "[[%s][%s]]%s" citekey year locstring))
((string-match "citealt" citetype)
(format "%s [[%s][%s]]%s" authors citekey year locstring))
((string-match "citealp" citetype)
(format "%s, [[%s][%s]]%s" authors citekey year locstring))
((string-match "nocite" citetype)
"")
((string-match "cite" citetype) ; other alternatives eliminated, this leaves "cite" or "citep", both bracketed
(format "[[%s][%s, %s]]%s" citekey authors year locstring))
(t
(format "*[org-cite failed to format =%s= citation]*" citetype)))))) ; end setq citation
;; Keep track of whether we might be adding to an open citet parenthesis
(when (string-match "citet" citetype) (setq citet-parens-open t))
;; Loop round
(setq previous-authors authors)
(setq locs (cdr locs))
(setq citekeys (cdr citekeys)))) ; end while citekeys
;; Close citet bracket if necessary
(when citet-parens-open
(setq citation (concat citation ")")))
;; Add pre-note
(setq citation (concat pre citation))
;; Bracket whole citation, if it's one of those types
(when (member citetype
'("citeauthor" "citeauthor*" "citeyearpar"
"cite" "cite*" "citep" "citep*"))
(setq citation (concat "(" citation ")")))
;; Tidy up
(setq citation (replace-regexp-in-string "~" (org-cite-str :nobreak) citation))
(setq citation (replace-regexp-in-string "[{}]" "" citation)) ;; FIXME this may hide debugging info
;; Return citation
citation))
(defun org-cite-format-with-bibtex ()
(interactive)
(let* ((package org-cite-bibtex-package) ; natbib, apacite, nil=plain...
(cite-re (if (equal package 'apacite)
org-cite-apacite-cite-re
org-cite-latex-cite-re))
(loc-sep (org-cite-str :loc-sep))
method file
bibcites bibcite
biblist ; if method is 'text, biblist holds the formatted bibliography
cited ; list of already cited works
citetype pre loc citekey citation)
;; Set default method
(unless method (setq method org-cite-method))
;; Set the strings to use
(cond
((equal package 'apacite)
(setq org-cite-strings org-cite-apacite-strings))
(t
(setq org-cite-strings org-cite-default-strings)))
;; Get file
(setq file (file-name-sans-extension
(file-name-nondirectory
(or
org-current-export-file
(buffer-file-name)))))
;; Get bibcites
(setq bibcites (org-cite-get-bibcites file))
;; If using references in text, get the references now
(when (equal method 'text)
(let (parts tmplist)
(setq biblist (split-string (org-cite-get-bbl file method bibcites) "\n\n" t))
(while biblist
(setq parts (split-string (car biblist) "::::"))
(setq tmplist
(cons (cons
(org-trim (car parts)) ; TODO a better way to trim newlines than:
(replace-regexp-in-string "\n" " " (org-trim (car (cdr parts)))))
tmplist))
(setq biblist (cdr biblist)))
(setq biblist tmplist)))
;;; Format citations
;;;
(goto-char (point-min))
;; Analyse cite macros
(while (re-search-forward cite-re nil t)
(if (equal package 'apacite)
(setq citetype (match-string 1) ; see org-cite-latex-cite-re
pre (match-string 3)
loc (match-string 5)
citekey (match-string 6))
;; else (natbib or plain)
(setq citetype (match-string 1) ; see org-cite-latex-cite-re
pre (and (match-string 4) (match-string 3)) ; only if there is a second, perhaps empty, option
loc (or (match-string 5) (match-string 3))
citekey (match-string 6)))
(setq bibcite (cdr (assoc citekey bibcites)))
;; (setq citetype (match-string 1) ; see org-cite-latex-cite-re
;; pre (if (and (match-string 2)
;; (string= "<" (substring (match-string 2) 0)))
;; ;; if apacite, the pre-note is in sharp brackets
;; (match-string 3)
;; ;; else (natbib), make first option pre only if there is a second
;; (and (match-string 4) (match-string 3)))
;; loc (or (match-string 5) (match-string 3))
;; citekey (match-string 6)
;; bibcite (cdr (assoc citekey bibcites)))
(cond
;; Author-date or numerical references
((or (equal method 'author-date) (equal method 'numeric))
(replace-match
(cond
;; natbib
((equal package 'natbib)
(save-match-data
(org-cite-format-natbib-citation citetype citekey bibcite loc pre)))
;; apacite
((equal package 'apacite)
(save-match-data
;; TODO - implement org-cite-format-apacite-citation if needed
;; but for now, rely on natbib
(when (string-match "^cite\\($\\|[^y]\\)" citetype)
;; apacite commands that begin with "cite", except
;; those that begin with "citeyear", map to "fullcite"
;; the first time they appear, "shortcite" thereafter
(setq citetype
(concat
(if (member citekey cited) "short" "full")
citetype)))
;; Map the apacite cite to a natbib citetype and do the natbib formatting
(if (assoc citetype org-cite-apacite-citetypes)
(setq citetype (cdr (assoc citetype org-cite-apacite-citetypes)))
(setq citetype "unknown")) ; TODO improve error handling
(org-cite-format-natbib-citation citetype citekey bibcite loc pre)))
;; plain
(t (format " ([[%s][%s%s%s]])"
citekey
bibcite
(if loc loc-sep "")
(or loc "")))))) ; close cond, replace-match, or
;; Full-text reference
((equal method 'text)
(replace-match
(format "%s%s%s"
(cdr (assoc citekey biblist)) ; biblist item, not bibcite
(if loc loc-sep "")
(or loc ""))))
;; Footnote reference
((equal method 'notes)
(replace-match (format "[fn:%s]" citekey)))) ; end cond
;; Add this to list of already cited works
(setq cited (cons citekey cited))) ; end while
;; Insert bibliography/references unless we have full references in
;; text. If there is a \bibliography command, place it there, after
;; the surrounding latex block if there is one. Else place at end of
;; buffer.
(unless (equal method 'text)
(goto-char (point-min))
(if (search-forward "\\bibliography" nil t)
(when (org-in-block-p '("latex"))
(search-forward "#+end_latex" nil t))
(goto-char (point-max)))
(insert (org-cite-get-bbl file method bibcites))))
(goto-char (point-min))
(if (called-interactively-p)
(message "Your original document has changed. Kill without saving or undo (C-c /) to avoid losing data.")
(message "Done formatting bibliographic references")))
(defun org-cite-get-bbl (file method bibcites)
"Return the contents of a .bbl file output by Bibtex as a
string in Org format."
(let ((package org-cite-bibtex-package)
citekey
returnvalue)
;; Get the .bbl contents and reformat them
;;
;; We're using a named buffer for debugging purposes -- if bbl
;; cleanup fails (as it often will), inspecting the contents of
;; org-cite-temp-bbl will show what org-cite choked on. With luck,
;; there'll be some superfluous braces that can be removed from
;; the BibTeX.
(with-current-buffer (get-buffer-create "org-cite-temp-bbl")
(latex-mode)
(insert-file-contents (concat "./" file ".bbl"))
(goto-char (point-min))
;; Remove thebibliography environment
(while (search-forward "{thebibliography}" nil t)
(move-beginning-of-line nil)
(kill-whole-line))
;; Replace bibitem macros with link/footnote targets
(goto-char (point-min))
(while (re-search-forward "\\\\bibitem\\(\\[[^]]+\\]\\)?{\\([^}]+\\)}" nil t)
;; WAS: (re-search-forward "\\\\bibitem{\\([^}]+\\)}" nil t)
(setq citekey (match-string 2))
(cond
((equal method 'author-date)
(replace-match (format "# <<%s>>" citekey)))
((equal method 'numeric)
(replace-match
(format "# <<%s>>\n(%s)"
citekey
(cdr (assoc citekey bibcites)))))
((equal method 'text)
(replace-match (format "%s::::" citekey)))
((equal method 'notes)
(replace-match (format "[fn:%s]" citekey)))))
;; Replace special characters with utf8 representation
(setq case-fold-search nil)
(org-cite-replace-in-buffer org-cite-latex-chars-utf8)
;; Replace {\e ...} with /.../, _{...}, ^{...} and [space]{...} with nothing
;; - TODO could this be done by org-cite-replace-in-buffer?
(org-cite-latex-clean-braces)
;; Do a couple more substitutions before tackling apacite
(org-cite-replace-in-buffer
'(("\\\\textit{\\([^}]+\\)}" . "/\\1/")
("\\\\textbf{\\([^}]+\\)}" . "*\\1*")))
;; Remove APACITE crud
(when (equal package 'apacite)
(org-cite-replace-in-buffer org-cite-apacite-substitutions))
;; Remove ordinary NATBIB crud
(org-cite-replace-in-buffer
'(("\\\\newblock" . "")
("~" . (org-cite-str :nobreak))
("\\\\/" . "") ; weird \/ sequences
("\\\\" . ""))) ; all remaining backslashes
;; If apacite, remove single empty newlines if not followed by
;; link target)
(when (equal package 'apacite)
(org-cite-replace-in-buffer '(("\n\n\\([^#]\\)" . " \\1"))))
;; Tidy up
(org-cite-replace-in-buffer org-cite-final-substitutions)
;; Fill as org-mode
(org-mode)
(fill-region (point-min) (point-max))
;; Return as string
(setq returnvalue (buffer-string))
;; Close buffer
(kill-buffer))
returnvalue))
(defun org-cite-latex-clean-braces ()
"Clean up various formatting in curly braces within the main macros."
(let (opentag closetag at-closing-brace)
(goto-char (point-min))
(while (re-search-forward "\\([{[:space:]~_^\n\"'-]\\){\\(\\\\em\\)?\\( \\)?" nil t)
(setq at-closing-brace nil)
(cond
((string= (match-string 2) "\\em")
(setq opentag " /" closetag "/"))
((string= (match-string 1) "^")
;;(setq opentag "@<sup>" closetag "@</sup>"))
(setq opentag " " closetag ""))
((string= (match-string 1) "_")
;;(setq opentag "@<sub>" closetag "@</sub>"))
(setq opentag " " closetag ""))
((string= (match-string 1) "~")
(setq opentag "~" closetag " "))
((string= (match-string 1) "\"")
(setq opentag "\"" closetag " "))
((string= (match-string 1) "'")
(setq opentag "'" closetag " "))
((string= (match-string 1) "{")
(setq opentag "{" closetag ""))
((string= (match-string 1) "\n")
(setq opentag "\n" closetag ""))
(t
(setq opentag " " closetag "")))
(goto-char (match-beginning 0))
(if (or (string= (match-string 1) "{")
(string= (match-string 1) "\n"))
;; if the opening curly brace is right after a brace or
;; a newline, move forward to the brace we want
(forward-char))
(while (not at-closing-brace)
(forward-sexp)
(if (= 125 (char-before)) (setq at-closing-brace t)))
(delete-char -1)
(insert closetag)
(replace-match opentag))))
(defvar org-cite-apacite-citetypes
'(("fullcite" . "citep*") ; (Black, Green and Brown, 2011)
("shortcite" . "citep") ; (Black et al., 2011)
("fullciteNP" . "citealp*") ; Black, Green and Brown, 2011
("shortciteNP" . "citealp") ; Black et al., 2011
;; there's no apacite equivalent of natbib citealt(*)
("fullciteA" . "citet*") ; Black, Green and Brown (2011)
("shortciteA" . "citet") ; Black et al. (2011)
("fullciteauthor" . "citeauthor*") ; (Black, Green and Brown) NO - natbib doesn't have a "citeauthorpar*"
("shortciteauthor" . "citeauthor") ; (Black et al.) NO - ditto
("fullciteauthorNP" . "citeauthor*") ; Black, Green and Brown
("shortciteauthorNP" . "citeauthor") ; Black et al.
("citeyear" . "citeyearpar") ; (2011)
("citeyearNP" . "citeyear") ; 2011
("nocite" . "nocite") ;
("nocitemeta" . "nocite")) ; NOT QUITE - natbib doesn't have this
"Maps apacite cite commands to the corresponding natbib
commands. The apacite commands beginning with `cite' are not
included, as they are mapped to the corresponding commands
beginning with `full' or `short' before this table is looked up.
MAYBE TODO: For full APA support, it may be necessary to define a
separate citation-formatting function for apacites, but for now
we try cheating.")
(defvar org-cite-apacite-substitutions
'(("%\n" . "")
("\\\\nobreakspace " . (org-cite-str :nobreak))
;; I have no idea if these complicated expressions are necessary.
;; Will have to look more into apacite.
("\\\\BAstyle\\({\\([^}]*\\)}\\)?" . "")
("\\\\BAastyle\\({\\([^}]*\\)}\\)?" . "")
("\\\\BAnd\\({\\([^}]*\\)}\\)?" . (org-cite-str :and)) ; ed. AND trans.
("\\\\BBOP\\({\\([^}]*\\)}\\)?" . "(")
("\\\\BBCP\\({\\([^}]*\\)}\\)?" . ")")
("\\\\BAP\\({\\([^}]*\\)}\\)?" . " ")
("\\\\BBAA\\({\\([^}]*\\)}\\)?" . (org-cite-str :and))
("\\\\BBA\\({\\([^}]*\\)}\\)?" . (org-cite-str :and))
("\\\\BBAA\\({\\([^}]*\\)}\\)?" . (org-cite-str :and))
("\\\\BOthers\\(Period\\| \\){.}" . (org-cite-str :et-al))
("\\\\BBAY\\({\\([^}]*\\)}\\)?" . ", ") ; between author and year
("\\\\BBYY\\({\\([^}]*\\)}\\)?" . ", ") ; between subsequent years
("\\\\BBN\\({\\([^}]*\\)}\\)?" . ", ") ; before a postfix note (locator)
("\\\\BBOQ\\({\\([^}]*\\)}\\)?" . "") ; TODO opening quote in title
("\\\\BBCQ\\({\\([^}]*\\)}\\)?" . "") ; TODO closing quote in title
("\\\\BBC\\({\\([^}]*\\)}\\)?" . "; ") ; between multiple cites
("\\\\BPBI\\({\\([^}]*\\)}\\)?" . ".~") ; Period between initial
("\\\\BHBI\\({\\([^}]*\\)}\\)?" . ".-") ; Hyphen between initials
("\\\\BCBL\\({\\([^}]*\\)}\\)?" . ",") ; comma before last author
("\\\\BCBT\\({\\([^}]*\\)}\\)?" . ",") ; comma between author
("\\\\BIn\\({\\([^}]*\\)}\\)?" . (org-cite-str :in)) ; part of other work
("\\\\BEDS\\({\\([^}]*\\)}\\)?" . (org-cite-str :eds)) ; Book editors
("\\\\BED\\({\\([^}]*\\)}\\)?" . (org-cite-str :ed)) ; Book editor
("\\\\BEd" . (org-cite-str :edn)) ; abbreviation for "edition"
("\\\\BTR\\({\\([^}]*\\)}\\)?" . "Tech. Rep.")
("\\\\BPGS\\({\\([^}]*\\)}\\)?" . (org-cite-str :pp)) ; between pages
("\\\\BNUM\\({\\([^}]*\\)}\\)?" . (org-cite-str :number)) ; Non-journal-issue number, e.g. Report No.
;; The followig three are important for cleaning up no-date bibcites
("\\\\bibnodate{}" . (org-cite-str :no-date)) ; TODO check format
("{\\\\bibnodate {}}" . (org-cite-str :no-date)) ; NOTE this is some weirdness that crops up in .aux files
("\\\\APACyear {\\([^}]+\\)}" . "\\1")
("\\\\bibcomputersoftwaremanual" . "computer software manual") ; TODO check format
("\\\\unskip" . "")
("\\\\protect" . "")
("\\\\&" . "&")
("{\\\\BCnt{\\([0-9]\\)}}" . (org-cite-num-to-letter (match-string 1))) ; year letter
(" {}" . "")
("\\\\ " . " ")
("\\\\APACinsertmetastar{\\([^}]+\\)}" . "\n") ; Before the authorlist
("\\\\APACciteatitle{\\([^}]+\\)}" . "“\\1”") ; Cite article title in text
("\\\\APACcitebtitle{\\([^}]+\\)}" . "/\\1/") ; Cite book title in text
("\\\\APACmonth{\\([0-9]+\\)}" . (nth (1- (string-to-number (match-string 1))) org-cite-months)) ;
("\\\\APACrefYearMonthDay{\\([^}]*\\)}{\\([^}]+\\)?}{\\([^}]+\\)?}" . ;; "(\\1, \\2)")
(concat "(\\1"
(when (match-string 2) ", \\2")
(when (match-string 3) " \\3")
")"))
("\\\\APACrefYear{\\([^}]+\\)}" . "(\\1)")
("\\\\APACrefatitle{\\([^}]+\\)}{\\([^}]+\\)}" . "\\1") ; article title (\\1 is lowercased)
("\\\\APACrefbtitle{\\([^}]+\\)}{\\([^}]+\\)}" . "/\\1/") ; book title (\\1 is lowercased)
("\\\\APACrefnote{\\([^}]+\\)}" . "(\\1)") ; TODO check formatting (brackets?)
("\\\\APACjournalVolNumPages{\\([^}]*\\)}{\\([^}]+\\)?}{\\([^}]+\\)?}{\\([^}]+\\)?}" .
(concat "/\\1"
(if (match-string 2) ", \\2/ " "/ ")
(when (match-string 3) "(\\3)")
(when (match-string 4) ", \\4")))
("\\\\APACbVolEdTR{\\([^}]*\\)}{\\([^}]*\\)}" . "\\1 \\2") ; not sure about this one
("\\\\APACaddressPublisher{\\([^}]+\\)?}{\\([^}]+\\)?}" .
(concat (match-string 1)
(when (and (match-string 1) (match-string 2)) ": ")
(match-string 2)))
("\\\\APACaddressPublisherEqAuth{\\([^}]+\\)}{\\([^}]+\\)}" . "\\1: \\2")
("\\\\APACaddressInstitution{\\([^}]+\\)}{\\([^}]+\\)}" . "\\1: \\2")
("\\\\APAChowpublished{\\([^}]+\\)}" . "\\1")
("\\\\begin{APACrefURL}" . "Available from ")
("\\\\url{\\([^}]+\\)}" . "\\1")
("\\\\end{APACrefURL}" . "")
("\\\\PrintBackRefs{\\([^}]+\\)}" . "\n")
("\\\\PrintOrdinal{\\([^}]+\\)}" . "\\1"))
"Substitutions for the semantic crud left in LaTeX aux and bbl
files by apacite.")
(defun org-cite-map-chars (&optional source target include-math to-string)
"Utility to extract from org-entities an alist of special
characters/markup in the SOURCE encoding and their equivalents in
the TARGET encoding (for an example, see
org-cite-latex-chars-utf8). SOURCE and TARGET default to latex
and utf8 respectively. Other options are org, html, ascii and
latin1. The list is extracted from org-entities. If INCLUDE-MATH
is non-nil, characters that need to be in math-mode in LaTeX are
also included. If TO-STRING is non-nil, results are returned as a
string of elisp rather than as a list."
(let ((entities (reverse org-entities))
(fields '((org . 0) (latex . 1) (mathp . 2) (html . 3)
(ascii . 4) (latin1 . 5) (utf8 . 6)))
charmap
record sourcechar targetchar)
(unless source
(setq source 'latex
target 'utf8))
(while entities
(setq record (car entities))
(when (and (listp record) ; this is an entry in org-entities
(or (not (nth 2 record)) ; and it either is not math-only
include-math)) ; or we include math
(setq sourcechar (nth (cdr (assoc source fields)) record)
targetchar (nth (cdr (assoc target fields)) record))
(when (eq source 'latex)
;; Don't include it if it doesn't start with a "\"
(unless (string-match "\\\\" sourcechar) (setq sourcechar ""))
;; Add matchsticks for matching rather than replacing
(setq sourcechar (replace-regexp-in-string "\\\\" "\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\" sourcechar)))
(unless (string= sourcechar "")
(setq charmap
(if to-string
(concat "\n(\"" sourcechar "\" . \"" targetchar "\")" charmap)
(cons (cons sourcechar targetchar) charmap)))))
(setq entities (cdr entities)))
charmap))
(org-cite-map-chars 'latex 'utf8)
(defvar org-cite-latex-chars-utf8
'(("\\\\`{A}" . "À")
("\\\\`{a}" . "à")
("\\\\'{A}" . "Á")
("\\\\'{a}" . "á")
("\\\\^{A}" . "Â")
("\\\\^{a}" . "â")
("\\\\~{A}" . "Ã")
("\\\\~{a}" . "ã")
("\\\\\"{A}" . "Ä")
("\\\\\"{a}" . "ä")
("\\\\AA{}" . "Å")
("\\\\AA{}" . "Å")
("\\\\aa{}" . "å")
("\\\\AE{}" . "Æ")
("\\\\ae{}" . "æ")
("\\\\c{C}" . "Ç")
("\\\\c{c}" . "ç")
("\\\\'{C}" . "Ć") ; lat2: Cacute
("\\\\'{c}" . "ć") ; lat2: cacute
("\\\\v{C}" . "Č") ; lat2: Ccaron
("\\\\v{c}" . "č") ; lat2: ccaron
("\\\\^{C}" . "Ĉ") ; lat2: Ccirc
("\\\\^{c}" . "ĉ") ; lat2: ccirc
("\\\\DJ" . "Đ") ; lat2: Dstrok
("\\\\dj" . "đ") ; lat2: dstrok
("\\\\`{E}" . "È")
("\\\\`{e}" . "è")
("\\\\'{E}" . "É")
("\\\\'{e}" . "é")
("\\\\^{E}" . "Ê")
("\\\\^{e}" . "ê")
("\\\\\"{E}" . "Ë")
("\\\\\"{e}" . "ë")
("\\\\^{G}" . "Ĝ") ; lat2: Gcirc
("\\\\^{g}" . "ĝ") ; lat2: gcirc
("\\\\^{H}" . "Ĥ") ; lat2: Hcirc
("\\\\^{h}" . "ĥ") ; lat2: hcirc
("\\\\`{I}" . "Ì")
("\\\\`{i}" . "ì")
("\\\\'{I}" . "Í")
("\\\\'{i}" . "í")
("\\\\^{I}" . "Î")
("\\\\^{i}" . "î")
("\\\\\"{I}" . "Ï")
("\\\\\"{i}" . "ï")
("\\\\^{J}" . "Ĵ") ; lat2: Jcirc
("\\\\^{j}" . "ĵ") ; lat2: jcirc
("\\\\~{N}" . "Ñ")
("\\\\~{n}" . "ñ")
("\\\\`{O}" . "Ò")
("\\\\`{o}" . "ò")
("\\\\'{O}" . "Ó")
("\\\\'{o}" . "ó")
("\\\\^{O}" . "Ô")
("\\\\^{o}" . "ô")
("\\\\~{O}" . "Õ")
("\\\\~{o}" . "õ")
("\\\\\"{O}" . "Ö")
("\\\\\"{o}" . "ö")
("\\\\O" . "Ø")
("\\\\o{}" . "ø")
("\\\\OE{}" . "Œ")
("\\\\oe{}" . "œ")
("\\\\v{S}" . "Š")
("\\\\v{s}" . "š")
("\\\\^{S}" . "Ŝ") ; lat2: Scirc
("\\\\^{s}" . "ŝ") ; lat2: scirc
("\\\\ss{}" . "ß")
("\\\\`{U}" . "Ù")
("\\\\`{u}" . "ù")
("\\\\'{U}" . "Ú")
("\\\\'{u}" . "ú")
("\\\\^{U}" . "Û")
("\\\\^{u}" . "û")
("\\\\\"{U}" . "Ü")
("\\\\\"{u}" . "ü")
("\\\\u{U}" . "Ŭ") ; lat2: Ubreve
("\\\\u{u}" . "ŭ") ; lat2: ubreve
("\\\\'{Y}" . "Ý")
("\\\\'{y}" . "ý")
("\\\\\"{Y}" . "Ÿ")
("\\\\\"{y}" . "ÿ")
("\\\\v{Z}" . "Ž") ; lat2
("\\\\v{z}" . "ž") ; lat2
("\\\\DH{}" . "Ð")
("\\\\dh{}" . "ð")
("\\\\TH{}" . "Þ")
("\\\\th{}" . "þ")
("\\\\dots{}" . "…")
("\\\\dots{}" . "…")
("\\\\textperiodcentered{}" . "·")
("\\\\-" . "")
("\\\\textquotedbl{}" . "\"")
("\\\\textasciiacute{}" . "´")
("\\\\textquotedblleft{}" . "“")
("\\\\textquotedblright{}" . "”")
("\\\\quotedblbase{}" . "„")
("\\\\textquoteleft{}" . "‘")
("\\\\textquoteright{}" . "’")
("\\\\quotesinglbase{}" . "‚")
("\\\\guillemotleft{}" . "«")
("\\\\guillemotright{}" . "»")
("\\\\guilsinglleft{}" . "‹")
("\\\\guilsinglright{}" . "›")
("\\\\textbrokenbar{}" . "¦")
("\\\\S" . "§")
("\\\\&" . "&")
("\\\\textless{}" . "<")
("\\\\textgreater{}" . ">")
("\\\\~{}" . "~")
("\\\\textdagger{}" . "†")
("\\\\textdaggerdbl{}" . "‡")
("\\\\hspace*{.5em}" . " ")
("\\\\hspace*{1em}" . " ")
("\\\\hspace*{.2em}" . " ")
("\\\\textcurrency{}" . "¤")
("\\\\textcent{}" . "¢")
("\\\\pounds{}" . "£")
("\\\\textyen{}" . "¥")
("\\\\texteuro{}" . "€")
("\\\\EUR{}" . "€")
("\\\\EURdig{}" . "€")
("\\\\EURhv{}" . "€")
("\\\\EURcr{}" . "€")
("\\\\EURtm{}" . "€")
("\\\\textcopyright{}" . "©")
("\\\\textregistered{}" . "®")
("\\\\texttrademark{}" . "™")
("\\\\textpm{}" . "±")
("\\\\textpm{}" . "±")
("\\\\texttimes{}" . "×")
("\\\\textdiv{}" . "÷")
("\\\\textonehalf{}" . "½")
("\\\\textonequarter{}" . "¼")
("\\\\textthreequarters{}" . "¾")
("\\\\textperthousand{}" . "‰")
("\\\\textonesuperior{}" . "¹")
("\\\\texttwosuperior{}" . "²")
("\\\\textthreesuperior{}" . "³")
("\\\\textmu{}" . "µ")
("\\\\textasciimacron{}" . "¯")
("\\\\textdegree{}" . "°")
("\\\\textlnot{}" . "¬")
("\\\\textbullet{}" . "•")
("\\\\textbullet{}" . "•")
("\\\\P{}" . "¶")
("\\\\textordfeminine{}" . "ª")
("\\\\textordmasculine{}" . "º")
("\\\\c{}" . "¸")
("\\\\textasciidieresis{}" . "¨")
("\\\\/{}" . "")
("\\\\smiley{}" . "☺")
("\\\\blacksmiley{}" . "☻")
("\\\\frownie{}" . "☹"))
"Maps LaTeX special characters to utf-8. Based on org-entities,
with additions.")
(provide 'org-cite)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: bibtex bibliography exported to HTML
2012-01-04 22:35 ` Nick Dokos
@ 2012-01-04 22:58 ` Christian Moe
2012-01-04 23:09 ` Stephen J. Barr
0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread
From: Christian Moe @ 2012-01-04 22:58 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: nicholas.dokos; +Cc: Stephen J. Barr, emacs-orgmode
On 1/4/12 11:35 PM, Nick Dokos wrote:
> The package mentioned there, org-exp-bibtex.el is in contrib/lisp.
Right, I'd forgotten that. Stephen might want to try that out, rather
than my Org-cite draft. It may be easier to use and is certainly more
mature.
I'll have a fresh look at it myself when I get the time: I was stumped
before because it requires bibtex2html, written in Objective Caml,
which I never got to compile... but it looks like they've got OS X
binaries now.
Yours,
Christian
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: bibtex bibliography exported to HTML
2012-01-04 22:58 ` Christian Moe
@ 2012-01-04 23:09 ` Stephen J. Barr
0 siblings, 0 replies; 6+ messages in thread
From: Stephen J. Barr @ 2012-01-04 23:09 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: mail; +Cc: nicholas.dokos, emacs-orgmode
Thank you Nicholas and Christian. I'll give them both a try.
On Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 2:58 PM, Christian Moe <mail@christianmoe.com> wrote:
> On 1/4/12 11:35 PM, Nick Dokos wrote:
>>
>> The package mentioned there, org-exp-bibtex.el is in contrib/lisp.
>
>
> Right, I'd forgotten that. Stephen might want to try that out, rather than
> my Org-cite draft. It may be easier to use and is certainly more mature.
>
> I'll have a fresh look at it myself when I get the time: I was stumped
> before because it requires bibtex2html, written in Objective Caml, which I
> never got to compile... but it looks like they've got OS X binaries now.
>
> Yours,
> Christian
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: bibtex bibliography exported to HTML
2012-01-04 22:50 ` Christian Moe
@ 2012-01-04 23:39 ` Thomas S. Dye
0 siblings, 0 replies; 6+ messages in thread
From: Thomas S. Dye @ 2012-01-04 23:39 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: mail; +Cc: Stephen J. Barr, emacs-orgmode
Another option is to export to LaTeX and then use tex4ht for the html.
All the best,
Tom
Christian Moe <mail@christianmoe.com> writes:
> On 1/4/12 10:31 PM, Stephen J. Barr wrote:
>> I want to include bibliography entries the
>> way I would with LaTeX, but then have a decent looking bibliography
>> when I export to HTML. Is this behaviour supported, and if so, how do
>> I do it?
>
> Hi,
>
> It's not currently supported, but I have some pretty raw code lying
> around from last summer to do just that. I'd be obliged if you'd test
> drive the attached Org-cite.el.
>
> Be warned, though, that even if it works for you, you'll probably want
> support and bugfixes that I have very little time for at the moment,
> being very busy with other work.
>
> This version depends on bibtex for the formatting, so you need a
> working LaTeX installation. When your document's changed, before you
> export to HTML (or ODT), you need to first do a latex export and run
> bibtex on it. Instructions follow below.
>
> Yours,
> Christian Moe
>
>
> ----
>
> ORG-CITE
>
> Org-cite formats bibliographic citations and reference lists in
> Org-mode documents for export with non-LaTeX backends (HTML, ODT,
> plain text, Docbook...). Citations are hyperlinked to references.
>
> Org-cite is /not/ mature for use in a "production environment." It
> is intended to come in handy when you can deliver your final product
> as LaTeX/PDF, but need to share drafts with full references in other
> formats (HTML, ODT) with others.
>
> Org-cite currently requires BibTeX for the formatting, so you still
> need a working LaTeX installation. Org-cite via BibTeX aims to produce
> a /reasonably close approximation/ to the formatting you get from a
> LaTeX export with a few of the most widely used BibTeX packages and
> styles (plain, natbib, and apacite for now). It does not /and will
> not/ aim at identical results to any package/style, nor to support all
> packages/styles out there.
>
> Future versions will aim to include other formatters beside
> BibTeX.
>
> Org-cite can read raw latex cite macros including the most
> usual subsets supported by the natbib and apacite packages: with
> long and short authorlists, pre-notes, post-notes (locators), and
> multiple citations, e.g. the natbib cite
>
> : The cow jumped over the moon, \citet[see
> e.g.][p.11,p.6]{goose2010,thumb1999,thumb2003}.
>
> should come out as something like
>
> : The cow jumped over the moon, see e.g. Goose et al. (2010); Thumb
> (1999; 2003).
>
> Future versions will also support some version of the custom Org cite
> links preferred by some users.
>
> Setting the command org-cite-format as a pre-processing hook for
> export is always safe, since changes are done to a temporary copy of
> your document. Doing org-cite-format directly in your working buffer
> is possible (and helpful for debugging), but risks permanently
> overwriting your cites if you then save without reverting. Please
> always back up before you try this.
>
>
> * Installation:
>
> Make sure you have a working LaTeX/BibTeX installation. Place
> org-cite.el somewhere on your load-path. Evaluate the following, or
> add permanently to your .emacs:
>
> #+begin_src emacs-lisp
> (require 'org-cite)
> (add-hook 'org-export-preprocess-hook 'org-cite-format)
> #+end_src
>
> Instead of adding the hook on startup, you can also toggle export
> behavior with `M-x org-cite-toggle'.
>
>
> * Use:
>
> Org-cite does not automatically detect what package you are using, so
> you need to tell it. The current options are natbib, apacite, or nil
> for plain.
>
> : (setq org-cite-bibtex-package 'apacite)
>
> You also need to tell org-cite how to format your citations. Org-cite
> gives you more options than some latex packages, but some of these may
> give nonsensical results. The current options are =author-date=,
> =numeric=, =notes= (similar to numeric, but inserted as Org
> footnotes), and =text= (full citation in text). I recommend sticking
> to the first three for now.
>
> : (setq org-cite-method 'author-date)
>
> If you only use one method, you may want to keep these in your .emacs.
>
> To export foo.org to foo.odt with references:
>
> - First export foo.org to LaTeX and process it until you get the
> output you want, e.g.
> : latex foo
> : bibtex foo
> : latex foo
> : pdflatex foo
> This produces =foo.aux= and =foo.bbl= files needed by org-cite.
> - Make sure org-export-preprocess-hook includes org-cite-format (see
> above), and that your org-cite-bibtex-package and org-cite-method
> settings agree with your LaTeX settings.
> - Export foo.org to ODT or other target format.
>
> If things go wrong, org-cite may have choked while trying to cull
> curly braces from your bibitems. You can troubleshoot this by looking
> at the bibitem at point in the =org-cite-temp-bbl= buffer, which is
> left open if org-cite ends prematurely (you need to kill this buffer
> before trying again).
>
>
> * Known problems
>
> Org-cite handles many special (non-ascii) characters as represented in
> LaTeX, but not all; and it is picky when it comes to how these special
> characters are written. Some editing of your .bib file or at least the
> .bbl produced by bibtexing may be necessary. For example, it will
> recognize \"{a} as ä, but will not recognize \"a or {\"a}. There are
> two ways you can solve this: either conform your .bib file to
> org-cite's requirements, or conform org-cite to your .bib file by
> customizing org-cite-latex-chars-utf8 to include \"a as well.
>
> For some reason I have not pinned down, a doubling of the bibliography
> section has been known to occur with some documents.
>
>
> * Reporting bugs:
>
> A bug report should ideally include all of the following:
> - What you expected to see, and what you got
> - The files foo.org, foo.aux and foo.bbl
> - If export failed, traceback from the debugger and the contents of
> the org-cite-temp-bbl buffer
>
--
Thomas S. Dye
http://www.tsdye.com
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2012-01-04 23:39 UTC | newest]
Thread overview: 6+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2012-01-04 21:31 bibtex bibliography exported to HTML Stephen J. Barr
2012-01-04 22:35 ` Nick Dokos
2012-01-04 22:58 ` Christian Moe
2012-01-04 23:09 ` Stephen J. Barr
2012-01-04 22:50 ` Christian Moe
2012-01-04 23:39 ` Thomas S. Dye
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