Bibliography mkii
Please note that this information is relevant to mkii. If you are using mkiv, see Bibliography.
The bib module provides the \cite and \placepublications commands, in addition to some setup commands, for collecting and referencing bibliography. Single references can be supplied by special commands, or by using BibTeX databases.
As of Context 2005.01.13, this module is part of the standard distribution. The current version is also on the modules:bib page (Hans picks up the zip from that location as well, so the current version will always be in the modules part of the ConTeXt distribution).
The PDF manual can be found on the bib module manual page or in your ConTeXt installation. For me (ConTeXt installed in my home directory), it's in ~/texmf/doc/context/bib/bibmod-doc.pdf. Read this manual, it is much more complete than this page!
Example of use with bibtex
Bibtex support is integrated in texexec you just have to set up the database name.
Assuming you have saved this bit of code as bibdemo.tex:
\usemodule[bib] \usemodule[bibltx] \setupbibtex[database=xampl] \setuppublications[numbering=yes] % Show reference numbers in the generated list. \starttext As \cite[article-full] already indicated, bibtex is a \LaTeX-centric program. \completepublications \stoptext
Then you just have to run the following command:
texexec bibdemo
To get the typeset result. xampl.bib is a bibtex file example coming with the bibtex distribution (it should be on your harddisk somewhere already: on my teTeX 3.0 system, /usr/share/texmf-tetex/bibtex/bib/base/xampl.bib is the location), in which the article-full key is referred.
The \usemodule[bibltx]
line is needed because xampl.bib uses LaTeX commands and defines them using LaTeX syntax. The bibltx module allows ConTeXt to understand some such constructions (which is enough for it to work with xampl.bib).
Note: Since Bibtex is added to the context core, no external module is necessary. It is sufficient to type for example (minimal):
\setupbibtex[database=bib] \starttext \completepublications \stoptext
Changing the way you show the publication list
If you use bibtex and you want to change the way you show the publication list you might want to look at the following example, it will change the publication list showing the surname in uppercase.
(Credits go to Taco Hoekwater)
%D Copied from \invertedshortauthor, with an extra \uppercase %D \type{#1} = firstnames %D \type{#2} = von %D \type{#3} = surname %D \type{#4} = inits %D \type{#5} = junior \unprotect\def\UCauthor#1#2#3#4#5% {\bibdoif{#2}{#2\bibalternative\c!vonsep}% \uppercase{#3}\bibalternative\c!surnamesep \bibdoif{#5}{#5\bibalternative\c!juniorsep}% \bibdoif{#4}{#4\unskip}} \protect
After that, you can do:
\setuppublicationlist [artauthor=\UCauthor, editor=\UCauthor, author=\UCauthor]
Active URLs
If you want active (clickable) URLs in the references, you need to do a few steps. [Thanks to Tobias Burnus for the working minimal example, which I've modified only slightly.]
- Use a patched
t-bib.tex
(until the next ConTeXt release sometime in May 2007 that will contain the patch).
- Use the
url
field in thebibtex
entries.
- Setup a publication layout (for those types of
bibtex
entries) that knows how to include a URL.
The minimal example is in File:Biburls.zip, which includes the patched t-bib.tex
. But here are the details of steps 2 and 3. A bibtex
book
entry using the url
field looks like:
@Book{HPL2000, editor = {John D. Barnsford and Ann L. Brown and Rodney R. Cocking}, title = {{How people learn: Brain, mind, experience, and school}}, publisher = {National Academy Press}, year = 2000, address = {Washington, DC}, edition = {expanded}, url = {http://www.nap.edu/} }
The modified \setuppublicationlayout
, which goes into an environment file or in the preamble of the .tex
file, includes lines to use the url
field. Since I use the num
style for the publication list, with \setuppublications[alternative=num]
, I take the book
layout from the bibl-num.tex
source file and modify it by adding two lines:
\unprotect % copied from bibl-num.tex and added % \inserturl and \insertdoi \setuppublicationlayout[book]{% \insertauthors{}{\unskip. }{\inserteditors{}{\unskip, editor% \ifnum\getvalue{editor@num}> 1 s\fi.% \ \global\editedbooktrue }{\insertthekey{}{\unskip. }{}}}% \inserttitle {\bgroup\it }% {\/\egroup \ifeditedbook.% \global\editedbookfalse \insertvolume { Number~}% {\insertseries { in~\bgroup}% {\egroup. }% {\insertcrossref{ in~}{}{. }}}% {\insertseries{ }{.}{} }% \else \insertcrossref {\insertchap{, }{}{}% \insertpages{, pages }{. }{. }% \insertvolume{Volume~}{ of~}{}% }% {}% {\insertvolume {, volume~}% {\insertseries { of~\bgroup\it}% {\egroup} {}} {}% \insertchap{, }{}{}% \insertpages{, pages }{.}{.}% }% \fi}% {}% \insertpublisher { }% {\insertedition{, }{ edition}{}% \insertpubyear{, }{.}{.}}% {\insertedition{, }{ edition}{}% \insertpubyear{, }{.}{.}}% \insertpages{ }{p.}{}% \insertdoi{ }{.}{}%added \insertbiburl{ }{.}{}%added \insertnote{ }{.}{}% } \protect
When running 'texexec', check the terminal output (or logfile) to ensure that texexec finds the modified t-bib.tex (which I have been keeping in the current directory) rather than the system-supplied t-bib.tex. Once the patched t-bib.tex becomes the official release (Taco says sometime in May 2007), that step won't be necessary.
Superscript Citations
Cross-referenced citations can be raised in the text using the \raisebox command:
% Superscript citation cross-references. \setupcite[num][ left=\raisebox{1ex}\hbox\bgroup\tfxx, right=\egroup, ]
Other tips
- \placepublications and \completepublications default to producing a publication list for the citations that are local to the current sectioning level. If you find that your reference list is empty even though the citations look fine, you will probably need to add an option to the list command, like so:
\placepublications[criterium=all]
- To refer directly to a reference number (called inline or online cite), you can do \cite[left=,right=][myRef] or simply define
\def\onlinecite{\cite[left=,right=]} \onlinecite[myRef]
- To add further information to a reference, such as a page number within a book, do
\cite[extras={, page 275}][your-book-reference]
- Bibtex supports mnemonics for months, for example
month=jan, month=feb,
etc. This allows the style file to choose how to display months. By default, the bib module does not do any conversion of the months. This causes the months to turn up as digits. If you want months to come in words add
\setuppublications [monthconversion=month] %or month:mnem
- Even though Bibtex is not encoding-aware at all, it does allows special (8-bit) characters. So there is no need for ugly constructs like \"a (for ä) or \'e (for é). The one exception is within author family names, because those are handled specially, both for sorting and for generating so-called 'short tags'. For the same reasons, one must also avoid using non-ascii characters in the bibtex citation reference labels.
- Bibliography items whose title ends in a ‘?’ (question mark, interrogation mark) can cause problems. See Question marks in bibliography entries for details of how to work around this.
What can I do, if entries are not shown?
Check if a jobname.bbl
- file is generated. If it is empty, try manually running
bibtex <filename>
In case of an error message like I couldn't open style file cont-no.bst
, you can try
mktexlsr
in root terminal. Bibtex uses LS-R to find these files.
Other tips and links
- Simple Bibliography or "simplebib": A simple bibliography module without any database (2012)
- sample bib file (2010, Old Content)