Nicolas Goaziou <[email protected]> writes:
> Another option is to mimic custom links, if that's what you're thinking
> of, which means to store every user-defined keyword in a variable and
> build a regexp out of it. I dislike it even more because the document is
> not portable anymore, as it requires you to share your custom keywords.
So, the (opinionated) useful defaults in biblatex are:
cite(s), parencite(s), footcite(s), texcite(s), fullcite,
footfullcite, nocite
Citation types for extracting parts:
citeauthor, citetitle, citeyear, citedate, citeurl,
>From natbib:
citet (== textcite), citep (== parencite).
Keys I don't care about, since they are quite biblatex specific:
smartcite, autocide, parentcite*, uppercase variants. *volcites(s) (any
objections?)
In natbib:
citealt, citalp, starred variants
So that's 17 support keys and two aliases. I guess this would deter most
authors from needing custom styles.
> Note that it rules out colons from KEY syntax (but we can use another
> less common character, e.g. "|").
The default bibtex.el style generates keys like "%A%y:%t", so I think ":"
is no good, appealing as it is.
—Rasmus
Footnotes:
¹ which is just
[cite: common pre; pre1 @k1 post1; ⋯; preN @kN postN; common post]
--
Er du tosset for noge' lårt!