Very easy and I do this actually. All you have to do is after you latex the
file once, drop the .aux file on top of your master file that is opened in
bibdesk. Bibdesk will select all the matching entries. Now copy these, open a
new bibtex file from Bibdesk and paste what you copied into that fi
> On 23 Aug 2020, at 15:43, Christiaan Hofman wrote:
>
> I guess it depends a lot on your work flow. For instance, do you typically
> edit your data in the master filr or in the detail files?
>
> If you mainly edit in your master file, you could export the relevant items
> to the detail file
I guess it depends a lot on your work flow. For instance, do you typically
edit your data in the master filr or in the detail files?
If you mainly edit in your master file, you could export the relevant items
to the detail file when needed. You could keep static groups for those, and
select them w
Dear Daniele,
For all the good reasons you mention (and some others) I do not keep the large
master file in the Dropbox. Even more importantly, my precious repository of
pdf’s that goes with that master file, is also way too large to fit into my
Dropbox. In cases where I needed to have the same
Since I am using VoiceOver screenreader for accessibility purposes on the Mac
drag and drop doesn’t work for me. I use the export menu to export entries from
a master file and then import them in the local file for the particular project
I am building.
-Kevin
> On Aug 23, 2020, at 5:00 AM, Dan
Dear All,
I'm relatively new to BibDesk, and I am trying to improve my workflow. I
have tried to search for this information but could not find it, so feel
free to redirect me to the documentation, or other discussions. It seems so
basic to me that I'm almost sure it's been discussed plenty of tim