The first record of my database, with the header JabRef adds.
This file was created with JabRef 2.2b. Encoding: UTF-16 @ARTICLE{Apostolidis2004, author = {N. Apostolidis and G. P. Nassis and T. Bolatoglou and N. D. Geladas}, title = {Physiological and technical characteristics of elite young basketball players}, journal = {Journal of Sports Medicine and Physical Fitness}, year = {2004}, volume = {44}, pages = {157--163}, number = {2}, owner = {jcredberry}, pdf = {C:\Users\jcredberry\Desktop\Doctorado\Tesis\Articulos\Apostolidis2004.pdf}, timestamp = {2006.11.29} } On 4/6/07, Paul A. Rubin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Julio Rojas wrote: > This is BibTeX, Version 0.99c (MiKTeX 2.5) > The top-level auxiliary file: articulo.aux > The style file: plain.bst > Database file #1: > 0C__Users_jcredberry_Desktop_Doctorado_Fuzzy_ArtÝculo_proyecto > .bib > You're missing an entry type---line 7 of file > 0C__Users_jcredberry_Desktop_Docto > rado_Fuzzy_ArtÝculo_proyecto.bib > : @ > : A R T I C L E { A p o s t o l i d i s 2 0 0 4 , > I'm skipping whatever remains of this entry > Assuming this is verbatim, there may be an encoding issue (?). The fact that the word 'article' is spaced out (and separated from the '@') suggests that there are extra bytes (16 bit v. 8 bit encoding?). If you look in your .bib file with a text editor, do you see '@ARTICLE' as a single word? /Paul
-- ------------------------------------------------- Julio Rojas [EMAIL PROTECTED]