HANS: there is one specific comment for you, below.
On Sat, 17 Feb 2018 15:27:03 +0100
Otared Kavian
Dear all,
I am in the process of learning how to use the bibliography mechanism in mkiv, and I would lik eto understand the meanings of the various parameters in the command:
\setupbtxrendering [...,1,...] [..,..2=..,..] 1 NAME 2 textstate = start stop pagestate = start stop separator = COMMAND criterium = previous cite here all none filter = TEXT specification = NAME title = TEXT before = COMMAND after = COMMAND dataset = NAME method = dataset force local global none sorttype = short dataset list reference used default cite index repeat = yes no group = NAME numbering = yes no num index tag short page
Indeed serveral of them are clear enough (such as dataset), some can be guessed by trial and error (such as numbering=yes or no) but some seem to me obscure or difficult to guess (what would numbering=page mean, or what would separator=COMMAND do, what does the title=TEXT corresponds to, etc).
Has someone some examples to play with in order to learn the meaning of these options?
Also, in real case document I would like to be able to typeset the bibliography with the following style:
the autho's name is followed by a « : » the title of an article is in italic the title of a book is in slanted sans serif the number of the volume is in bold
Is it possible to do this by an appropriate setting of btxrendering, without going into the BibTeX file?
Thanks in advance for any help: OK
First of all, don't put any such formatting in the BibTeX file: that is a LaTeX-style hack, and we have designed the ConTeXt system to avoid any such need. The dataset should contain only data, and hacks should be avoided. There is some limitation to this. Say, for example that the title contains mathematical symbols. One would be hard pressed not to include dollar-sign delimiters and math syntax! Another example could be "edition={second}" and "edition={2\high{nd}}". Of course, one could introduce conversion sets (like for months), but this gets complicated. How about "edition={second, revised with corrections}"? Most of the customizations that you ask are obtained through setups: For the author's name, depends on what you want: " : " after the list of authors or after each author? If you want this after the list of authors, then one needs to redefine a setup: From publ-imp-authors.mkvi \startsetups \s!btx:\s!list:\s!author:others \ifcase\currentbtxoverflow \else \btxparameter\c!otherstext \fi \stopsetups (this gets called at the end of the author list construction). One could add at the end \btxcolon, defined (in publ-ini.mkiv) as \unexpanded\def\btxcolon {\removeunwantedspaces:\space} but you would want a space before, so you would probably want to add, rather "\space:\space" HANS: perhaps this requested use might call for a new parameter (separator:names:5=,) to be put at the *end* of an author list in *all* of the appropriate setups, rather than having to redefine the :others setup which is sort-of a hack? In this case, Otared would then use \setupbtx [apa:list:author] [separator:names:5={\space:\space}] (assuming that he uses the apa specification) DON'T try this, as we do not implement it (yet)! For the other requests: \setupbtx [apa:list:title] [style=italic] (the default for apa) \setupbtx [apa:list:title:book] [style={slanted,sans}] (untested) \setupbtx [apa:list:volume] [style=bold] (apa default is italic) On your other questions, a rendering uses the standard list mechanism, so some of the parameters (such as pagestate) get passed on. See \setuplist Others, such as numbering= yes no num index tag short page controls the numbering of the list. It is numbering=num (or yes for default and aps) but numbering=no (for apa). numbering=index puts the dataset index (which depends on an internal hash) rather than num which is a cite instance number. numbering=tag puts the bibtex tag (as used in \cite). numbering=short puts the short tag, for example KAV18, that is a short author-year concoction. numbering=page, I don't know what this does (in my test, it put "?"). Many (but not all) of the rendering parameters are described (somewhat) in the documentation, which of course is not perfect! Alan