On Tue, 21 Feb 2017 18:46:18 -0500
Rik Kabel
I have a few questions about the new bibliography system. The following example code illustrates the problems.
\startbuffer[TestBib] @OTHER{Author1975a, author = {An Author}, title = {A title}, year = {1975}, } @OTHER{Author1975b, author = {Author, An}, title = {Another title}, year = {1975}, } @OTHER{Else1975a, author = {Somebody Else}, title = {A third title}, year = {1975}, } @OTHER{Else1975b, author = {Somebody Else}, title = {A last title}, year = {1975}, }
@FILM{Movie, producer = {Normal Name}, director = {Funny Name}, title = {Who Knew?}, year = {2010}, publisher = {Producer}, address = {Hollywood} }
@INBOOK{Subtitle, author = {Sally Subtitle-Spacing}, title = {Another Country}, year = {1958}, publisher = {Publisher}, address = {City}, volume = {16}, booktitle = {On the road}, booksubtitle = {Books and essays written while traveling under cover}, }
\stopbuffer \loadbtxdefinitionfile[apa] \usebtxdefinitions [apa] \usebtxdataset [TestBib.buffer] \definebtxrendering [Pubs][apa]
\starttext
\nocite[*]
\placelistofpublications[Pubs]
\stoptext
How can I get “An Author” treated like “Author, An” as in the OTHER examples? The result should like like that of “Somebody Else”. Bibtex databases have both forms and it would be nice if the work was done by ConTeXt automatically.
Context, like bibtex, interprets "An Author" as "First Last", "Author, An" being the explicit form, useful when the last name contains several components. The APA style, that you use, abbreviates the first names. Thus, "An Author" gets rendered correctly as Author, A. and "Somebody Else" as Else, S.
The manual suggests that fields like director (see the FILM example) can be induced to be treated as author/editor names by sufficiently advanced users. Would such a user please share the method?
producer= and director= are treated as names for @film{} in the APA specification.
In the INBOOK example, can we get a BOOKSUBTITLE field to complement the BOOKTITLE? My real bibliography has some very long titles, and I would rather have only the main part appear with \cite[booktitle][entry], yet have the title with subtitle in the bibliography.
We can easily add a booksubtitle field to the specification, to be handled like title/subtitle.
Also in the INBOOK example, I notice that the spacing after “Vol.” is a sentence space, and it should not be. The spacing after abbreviations in the bibliography should not depend on setting frenchspacing.
The abbreviation is followed by a space. You suggest that they should be treated specially, not like the end of a sentence. This does not only pertain to bibliographies. How is this generally done in TeX/Context for any abbreviations anywhere? (I wouldn't know... ;-) Alan