Nicolas, just jump to the last para. Feng Shu
Please CC the mailing list. I don't mind receiving or replying to one-to-one mails but things that we exchange will be of interest to other members. feng shu <tuma...@gmail.com> writes: > 1. When I add (setq org-odt-data-dir "~/project/org-mode/etc/") to my . > emacs file, it works properly, Thanks! > > 2. Two question: > 1. How can I get uppercite: test^[1] instead of test[1]? > 2. How can I get compressed cite,like: test^[3, 5, 7-10, 16] Thanks for the requests. Numbering is done by ox-jabref.el and not by JabRef application, so these requests can indeed be met with 5-15 minute of effort. But I hesitate to The main problem is there are just too many styles a Bibliographic Reference can be typeset - right from what some standard says, to what my university wants to what I prefer myself. This is where some sort of common agreement - even just among the members of the community - will help. I will keep listening to the conversation and hopefully an opinion will emerge during the course of time. > Forgot to mention: > The speed of converting bib to xml is slow, may be we should introduce > a cache system. If you use "Numbered" transcoders, then the citekeys are processed one by one. So if there are 10 citekeys, then there will be 20 invocations of command line. One way of dealing with this is to choose a transcoder, that doesn't enumerate. In that case the Bibliographic Reference is created enbloc. So the number of command line invocations will reduce to 11 = 10 + 1. The ASCII document that I circulated gives examples of such transcoders. > just like previewing latex snippet. Caching of citekey->XML or whatever transformation is one option. Another option is to just disable citations for casual exports and enable it one for the final output. Something like cite:t for #+OPTIONS. For now you can customize `org-odt-citation-transcoders' so that citation processing is disabled.