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Will LO develop a better system for citation/references?

asked 2012-06-09 16:19:05 +0200

sci_citation gravatar image sci_citation
88 1 8

updated 2012-06-09 16:20:00 +0200

I am unhappy with the built-in possibility for references. For scientific papers or university essays (ALL students have to produce such texts...!) the present system is not sufficient - and these bizarre form of abbreviation as an index is also just plain ugly. The http://www.zotero.org/ plug-in is ok, but I'd prefer a (offline) simple LO solution.

I hand you over an example of 3 stiles for references, as it should be in my opinion:

http://www.scribd.com/doc/96515051/CitationFormats-LO?secret_password=16fejt4t3dfiyiy9v6ip

Most important would be something like (Author, Year) as an index in the text - AND an easy standard (scientific journal) format for the references.

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@sci_citation, Please file an enhancement bug and provide as much information as possible. The QA team will be happy to help you triage your feature request in the bugtracker. Thanks!

qubit ( 2013-01-28 00:32:43 +0200 )edit

what enhancement shall be conducted? hire someone like @qubit to digginto data - eventually making things FEEL better.

jiero ( 2013-04-28 09:21:42 +0200 )edit

3 Answers

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answered 2012-11-19 02:59:00 +0200

ROSt52 gravatar image ROSt52 flag of Japan
1841 30 30

What is the problem with Zotero as plug-in? I never used it until now but got curious now.

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answered 2012-11-18 20:02:53 +0200

Jean-Baptiste FAURE gravatar image Jean-Baptiste FAURE flag of France
955 6 15

From my point of view Zotero is the best solution for scientific citation. And you can use Zotero offline.

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answered 2013-04-27 13:39:21 +0200

frgomes gravatar image frgomes flag of United Kingdom
1 2
http://rgomes.info/

updated 2013-04-28 04:31:17 +0200

As Jean-Baptiste pointed out, Zotero can be used offline.

I've created another answer which may be of your interest, which explores the architecture of Zotero and how it can be used offline:

http://ask.libreoffice.org/en/question/16689/how-zotero-integration-for-libreoffice-works/

If you are willing to keep your local library under your control, you can copy it from your home directory onto a pendrive, for example. I personally find this idea almost entirely useless, unless you have a computer without network connection.

Regarding the sources of information you mentioned, I don't have any particular experience with it. I use Google Scholar for finding papers of interest and I'm able to access them using my login account from the university. I don't even care which repositories are involved, actually.

Regarding citation styles, "Chicago Manual of Style (author-date)" is possibly what you are looking for. Not sure if there are other styles which produces the same effect.

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Asked: 2012-06-09 16:19:05 +0200

Seen: 377 times

Last updated: Apr 28