Difference between revisions of "Bibliographic/Hints and Tips"

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3. If you have too many citations to change in this way then you can edit the save file. Make a backup of your file. Rename your xxx.odt file xxx.zip, open the zip archive and extract the contents.xml file, open that file in a writer. '''Very carefully''' do a global find and replace for your corrections. Save the contents.xml back into the zip archive. Rename xxx.zip xxx.odt. Hoping you have not destroyed your file, open it and check.
 
3. If you have too many citations to change in this way then you can edit the save file. Make a backup of your file. Rename your xxx.odt file xxx.zip, open the zip archive and extract the contents.xml file, open that file in a writer. '''Very carefully''' do a global find and replace for your corrections. Save the contents.xml back into the zip archive. Rename xxx.zip xxx.odt. Hoping you have not destroyed your file, open it and check.
 
4. For 2.0.1: Insert a dummy copy of the reference, and edit it in the process, using the following method: Move the cursor to an empty line. Choose 'Insert | Bibliography Entry...'; Select the reference's short name; Click 'Edit'; Make your relevant changes and click 'OK'; Click 'Insert'; Press 'Yes' to the "The document already contains the..." dialog; Click 'Close'; Delete the dummy reference.
 
  
 
==Having your bibliography index automatically numbered==
 
==Having your bibliography index automatically numbered==

Revision as of 00:27, 17 May 2006

Back to Bibliographic Index

How do I preserve my Bibliographic Table format settings ?

When you done all that hard work in setting up the bibliographic table with all the field entries and formatting it to your document style, I suggest that you select and copy the Bibliographic table and save it in a other document.

The reason I suggest this is that, if you accidentally delete the Bibliographic Table, then all your work in formatting the table will be deleted too. To use your Bibliographic Table formatting in an other document, just copy that table into new document, it does not matter that the references are different, just right click over the table and select 'Update Index/Table' for it to be regenerated with that documents' citations and your previously defined Bibliographic Table format.

I edit my citations but the changes are not applied.

When you modify a citation (Bibliography Entry) by double-clicking on the citation, and selecting edit and modifying the entry. You also need to click on the 'Modify' button to apply the changes before you select the 'Close' button.

How do I correct the citations in my document?

If you have inserted a citation (Bibliography Entry) may times in a document and need to correct it. Correcting it in the database is not enough. The changes are NOT automatically made in the document. In fact each citation has complete copy of the citation data and must be correct for each citation. You have several options:

1. Find each citation, delete it and reinsert it (after correcting it in the database).

2. Find each citation, double-clicking on the citation, select edit, make the corrections, close the edit panel, click the 'Modify' button to apply the changes before you select 'Close'.

3. If you have too many citations to change in this way then you can edit the save file. Make a backup of your file. Rename your xxx.odt file xxx.zip, open the zip archive and extract the contents.xml file, open that file in a writer. Very carefully do a global find and replace for your corrections. Save the contents.xml back into the zip archive. Rename xxx.zip xxx.odt. Hoping you have not destroyed your file, open it and check.

Having your bibliography index automatically numbered

To use numbered references like e.g. [1], which is common for scientific documents, you can change the formatting of the reference anchors / entries in the document by setting "Number entries" under Insert->Index and Tables->Index/Table. Your actual generated bibliography however will not be automatically numbered just by checking this field. This also cannot be activated in the "Entries" dialog (while the idea of inserting the "Number" Type in front of an entry looks tempting, this will not yield the correct result). Instead, you have to activate numbering on the corresponding bibliography style. In most cases this will be "Bibliography 1". Activate "Numbering" on the Paragraph Style pane.

How can I import or export Bibliographic data?

The Openoffice bibliographic facility does not provide import/export filters yet. However there is an add-on bibtex import filter available. If you need to convert other bibliographic formats bibutils may help.

If you can download/export RIS (reference manager) format references from your datasource, then the utility RISmport.py may work better than a bibtext utility. It is a Python script for importing RIS format reference(s), RISmport.py. Possibly of some value as it hashes out some RIS details on mapping between fields, and suggests "sensitive" mapping for different reference types."

If this is not suitable then an option is to use a third part bibliographic application that will export to an OpenOffice Bibliographic database in the text bibliographic database CSV format. (Openoffice looks for a database called Bibliography with the correct fields - it does not care what type of database it is.) I have used Jabref or B3. Bibus is another possibility.

Your question is not answered here ?

Try the Bibliographic FAQ

I feel I am going around in circles and I can not find what I need.

You could post add a question to this page or send a question to the Bibliographic Project user's mail list at users@bibliographic.openoffice.org

You are invited to add more Hints and Tips

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