On 17/12/11 11:25:36, Thomas S. Dye wrote: > Nick Dokos <nicholas.do...@hp.com> writes: > > > Thomas S. Dye <t...@tsdye.com> wrote: > > > >> Of course, this just handles the in-text part for formats other > than > >> LaTeX. LaTeX uses bibtex or biblatex to compile the list of > >> references. I don't know how to accomplish this in ODT. For > html, > I > >> export from Org-mode to LaTeX, then use tex4ht to convert to html. > This > >> leverages the bibtex capabilities and yields nicely formatted > >> bibliographies in html. > >> > > > > If libreoffice can import HTML, maybe the tex4ht way can work for > ODT as > > well? > > > > Nick > > > > Hi Nick, > > Good catch. In principle, yes, though I've never worked with > libreoffice. We follow a similar path to produce Word versions of > our > documents when clients require them: Org -> LaTeX -> tex4ht -> html - > > > Word -> Save As -> lots of tidying by hand. It works, but it isn't a > pretty process with our setup. I'm sure folks on this list could do > better, though. > > tex4ht has some switches that help it produce output suited for this > path. It was designed to be configured very extensively. > > What I meant earlier (but didn't express well) was that I didn't know > if > it was possible to generate bibliographies from keys in the ODT > environment. I'm guessing there must be a way to do this (Endnote?, > Zotero?), but I haven't looked into it.
Even though my original question was a bit ambiguous, what I meant was generating the bibliography from keys. One org input file, output to all formats does the right thing. oolatex produces reasonably good OO output, including bibliography, so the org -> LaTeX -> oolatex sequence would work, but, again, seems clumsy. Particularly since Jambunathan's ODT export looks so good. Alan > > Tom > > -- > Thomas S. Dye > http://www.tsdye.com > -- Alan L Tyree http://www2.austlii.edu.au/~alan Tel: 04 2748 6206 sip:172...@iptel.org