5/14/2024 0 Comments Citw within jabref![]() On the bright side, my backup service worked, though I was too distraught for at least half an hour to realize that I might still recover all my work. The correct design for a tool like this is to accommodate diverse user styles, never embed upward-pointing knives in carpets, and never assume you have more ownership over library files than whoever worked for years to create them, even if you incorrectly think it’s more “efficient.” However, given the mind-bogglingly foolish decisions someone is making lately, I may have to find another tool. I want to keep using JabRef, given my investment in it. Also, files I click on no longer appear in the tools automatically they force me to click a blinking icon. ![]() I assume this is the same group that keeps destroying filenames that I carefully enter into bib texts, replacing them with some combination of downloads I never asked for and never wanted and links that are nothing like what I entered and, incidentally, never work after doing this minor destruction. Thinking you do is akin to deciding you can design a viper pit into someone’s living room and let them bear the consequences of not first reading whatever you decided made such pits extremely valuable and necessary for everyone. To whoever the new members of your team are that have decided you have total ownership of whatever folder JabRef happens to be running in and can change filenames as you please, let me make this as clear as possible: You do not. The fact that someone had designed this ability as something they thought would be “helpful” made it even worse. In decades of work in software, I’ve never seen programming so dangerous as destroying years of work in seconds due to the user doing one of the normally safest moves imaginable: moving a file into a folder. All I could do for about half an hour was scream, “WHY?” and try to keep from having a full breakdown. Before I could understand what was happening, years of scrupulously careful and extremely useful (readable filenames have high value for articles) work was destroyed. JabRef then proceeded, within less than a minute and with no warning or “Do you wish to proceed?” query, to obliterate about a decade’s worth of carefully-done, very-high-value filenames by renaming every one of them to the name of the bib file I had just moved in, replacing each high-value name with the name of the bib file I had just moved into the folder plus a counting integer. I then appended a date to the filename to keep it as a backup and moved the new filename back into my main library fold. Do not refer to chapters in the reference list (i.e.On Tue, I copied my primary bib file, library.bib to my desktop while JabRef was open.Notes on citation styleĬitation styles vary, but IMO the cleanest policy is the following: So, if you must use a particular Bibtex style that uses chapters, then include them in your *.bib files, and avoid Bibtex styles that allow you to refer to chapter numbers in the reference list whenever you can. ![]() I think the best policy is never to talk of chapter numbers in the reflist at all, and move talk of chapter numbers, on the few occasions they are needed, to the citation in the main text.
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