For Linux users this is not a big problem, they have everything in their hand. I am just giving here one combination of tools which is useful for reference management. I maintain my reference library in CiteULike. You can have a posting button in web browser. When you see an article, you can just click that button, then that article is added to your library. You can optionally give a key, which could be used as a reference key in Bibtex. Once you have done, you can export complete library to bibtex(.bib) format. Then you can add this .bib file in your latex file
\bibliographystyle{alpha} (style for references)
\bibliography{bibtex file} (without .bib extension)
where ever you want to cite an article from your bib file, you can just give \cite{key} where key is the bibtex reference key.
The compiling is bit different, you have to compile several time to get the correct output.
- pdflatex input-file : complains about undefined citations
- bibtex input-file : generates a bbl-file
- pdflatex input-file : complains about undefined citations
- pdflatex input-file
You will have to repeat the procedure every time you add or remove citations, as they will imply changes in the bbl-file.
We can easily change the style, just by changing one word. This gives the greate flexibility and advantage.
2 comments:
I'm a world traveller. What's that script? Tamil?
thegoose@citeulike
yes its tamil
Post a Comment