In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
 Rolf Schmolling <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> this was a very welcome hint. I've been pondering for a while what to  
> do about UTF8 or not and comments and abstracts. That Bibdesk is  
> handling this in the background was something I didn't know and I'm  
> very happy to learn about!
> 
> Now I face a problem connected to this.
> 
> When citing references which have a quote in their title (I'm a  
> historian) I've been putting in code-snippets like "\glqq some title- 
> text\grqq \ " or \glqq some title-text\glqq " into entries and via the  
> babel{german}-package and jurabib they turned right into what I wanted  
> them to look, in preview and in my documents. Does anybody know of a  
> smarter way to do this?
> 
> I am asking because when exporting a list of entries to html for an  
> online bibliography those "\glqq some title-text\grqq \ " are  
> obviously unwanted. Unfortunately quite a many references from my  
> database have such modifications.

Have you considered using xetex/xelatex?  That would allow you to save 
the proper quotes directly as Unicode characters.  If you depend on 
babel, an alternative might be to use some other encoding that supports 
those characters (8859-1?) with the appropriate inputenc command.

-- 
adam


-------------------------------------------------------------------------
This SF.net email is sponsored by: Microsoft
Defy all challenges. Microsoft(R) Visual Studio 2008.
http://clk.atdmt.com/MRT/go/vse0120000070mrt/direct/01/
_______________________________________________
Bibdesk-users mailing list
Bibdesk-users@lists.sourceforge.net
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bibdesk-users

Reply via email to