73 lines
3.2 KiB
Markdown
73 lines
3.2 KiB
Markdown
I would *love* to see a plugin that lets you create one or more BibTeX-formatted bibliography pages and add citations to other pages. The plugin could also render the bibliographies themselves using a chosen BibTeX style and an HTML formatter for LaTeX (such as HeVeA).
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--[[JoshTriplett]]
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I work on a plugin to htmlize '.bib' files.
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A sample result is shown on my webpage : <http://www.adupas.org/research/publications/>.
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It features the htmlization of the bibtex with 4 types of entry supported (InProceedings, Article, MastersThesis and PhdThesis). I will add the book entry support soon. It creates for each '.bib' file an html version, and for each entry a specific page with abstract as well as an individual bib file. It lack some features like the possibility to have a pdf or ps version of the article attached.
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This plugin uses two templates to render the html version of each file.
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I have a problem to create a new page that render like any other page in the wiki. I have used the Ikiwiki's internal **genpage($$)** routine but I suppose that there is another way to do this. My method lack the backlink support for the individual entry files as well as the modification date of these file.
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Is it possible to create several wiki page from only one source file?
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The source of this plugin could be found on this page : <http://www.adupas.org/software/ikiwiki/> .
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Feel free to propose any modifications to enhance this plugin.
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--[[AlexandreDupas]]
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I have not found any other approach to build several wiki page with only one source file. Does someone have an idea?
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I also try to build a wiki-wide preprocessing of the source file to find reference to my bib entry (citation) but apparently there is no wiki-wide preprocessing hook allowing to collect data from each page before building the site. Do I miss something?
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--[[AlexandreDupas]]
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> The scan hook is run on new page content before building --[[Joey]]
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What notation did you have in mind for citations? A preprocessor
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directive? Something LaTeX-inspired might be
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\[[!cite key="foo"]]
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which would output "(Foo, 2008)". With the appropriate options, this
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could allow for several variations like "Foo (2008)" and "(Foo, 2008,
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p. 28)". A `nocite` option could cause the reference to be printed in
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the bibliography but produce no output.
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What about the references section? There are several ways to
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go about it, for example:
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1. It could be included at the bottom of the page automatically for
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pages with references, with a configurable title and heading level
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(e.g., `<h2>References</h2>`) followed by a list of references.
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2. Use another preprocessor directive like
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## References ##
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\[[!bibliography ]]
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or
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\[[!bibliography title="References" headerlevel="2"]]
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with configurable default values. Would it be tedious to do this on
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every page?
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3. Use HTML::Template and allow users to add a bibliography section to
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`page.tmpl` to include the bibliography if references are present and
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loop over the references to emit a list. The downside here is having
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to ask people to modify their templates (unless the plugin is
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eventually included in the distribution).
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Any thoughts on the best way to proceed?
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--[[JasonBlevins]], March 23, 2008 21:41 EDT
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[[!tag soc]] [[!tag wishlist]]
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