RE: use of \citet (with natbib numeric) gives (author?) error
Hello Richard, thanks for the answer. I do not think it is a Unicode problem because I generate the bibtex file from Zotero using IS0-8859-15 which has worked before. Also, all author names appear fine in the bibliography itself. Even those with special characters such as ï. Any other ideas? Matthias -Original Message- From: Richard Heck [mailto:rgh...@comcast.net] Sent: Wednesday, July 13, 2011 3:40 PM To: Matthias Hunstig Cc: lyx-users@lists.lyx.org Subject: Re: use of \citet (with natbib numeric) gives (author?) error On 07/13/2011 05:58 AM, Matthias Hunstig wrote: Hello, I am using LyX 2.0 and just switched the citation style to Natbib (numeric) because I want to use \citet from time to time. However, whenever I use \citet, a bold *(author?)* appears in the PDF instead of the author name. The source code looks fine to me, for example: \citet[p.~223]{watson_2009} Any idea what causes this? This kind of thing is usually due to problems with the .bib file, and the problem is usually the presence of Unicode characters gotten from pasting a reference from the web or something. If you use bibtex for the processor, then the file really needs to be ASCII; if you use bibtex8, you can get away with 8-bit encodings; but Unicode needs special treatment and is not presently recommended. Richard
Re: use of \citet (with natbib numeric) gives (author?) error
On 07/14/2011 07:37 AM, Matthias Hunstig wrote: Hello Richard, thanks for the answer. I do not think it is a Unicode problem because I generate the bibtex file from Zotero using IS0-8859-15 which has worked before. Also, all author names appear fine in the bibliography itself. Even those with special characters such as ï. This does not mean that they are handled properly by the algorithms that create the citations. I would suggest you at least try this with a sanitized BibTeX file. rh Any other ideas? Matthias -Original Message- From: Richard Heck [mailto:rgh...@comcast.net] Sent: Wednesday, July 13, 2011 3:40 PM To: Matthias Hunstig Cc: lyx-users@lists.lyx.org Subject: Re: use of \citet (with natbib numeric) gives (author?) error On 07/13/2011 05:58 AM, Matthias Hunstig wrote: Hello, I am using LyX 2.0 and just switched the citation style to Natbib (numeric) because I want to use \citet from time to time. However, whenever I use \citet, a bold *(author?)* appears in the PDF instead of the author name. The source code looks fine to me, for example: \citet[p.~223]{watson_2009} Any idea what causes this? This kind of thing is usually due to problems with the .bib file, and the problem is usually the presence of Unicode characters gotten from pasting a reference from the web or something. If you use bibtex for the processor, then the file really needs to be ASCII; if you use bibtex8, you can get away with 8-bit encodings; but Unicode needs special treatment and is not presently recommended. Richard
Re: use of \citet (with natbib numeric) gives (author?) error
On 14/07/2011 7:37 AM, Matthias Hunstig wrote: Hello Richard, thanks for the answer. I do not think it is a Unicode problem because I generate the bibtex file from Zotero using IS0-8859-15 which has worked before.. Also, all author names appear fine in the bibliography itself. Even those with special characters such as ï. Any other ideas? Matthias -Original Message- From: Richard Heck [mailto:rgh...@comcast.net] Sent: Wednesday, July 13, 2011 3:40 PM To: Matthias Hunstig Cc: lyx-users@lists.lyx.org Subject: Re: use of \citet (with natbib numeric) gives (author?) error On 07/13/2011 05:58 AM, Matthias Hunstig wrote: Hello, I am using LyX 2.0 and just switched the citation style to Natbib (numeric) because I want to use \citet from time to time. However, whenever I use \citet, a bold *(author?)* appears in the PDF instead of the author name. The source code looks fine to me, for example: \citet[p.~223]{watson_2009} Any idea what causes this? This kind of thing is usually due to problems with the .bib file, and the problem is usually the presence of Unicode characters gotten from pasting a reference from the web or something. If you use bibtex for the processor, then the file really needs to be ASCII; if you use bibtex8, you can get away with 8-bit encodings; but Unicode needs special treatment and is not presently recommended. Richard You also need to use a natbib-compatible bibliography style. You select this by clicking on your BibTeX Generated Bibliography in your LyX document and selecting e.g. plainnat -- Julien
RE: use of \citet (with natbib numeric) gives (author?) error
Hello Richard, thanks for the answer. I do not think it is a Unicode problem because I generate the bibtex file from Zotero using IS0-8859-15 which has worked before. Also, all author names appear fine in the bibliography itself. Even those with special characters such as ï. Any other ideas? Matthias -Original Message- From: Richard Heck [mailto:rgh...@comcast.net] Sent: Wednesday, July 13, 2011 3:40 PM To: Matthias Hunstig Cc: lyx-users@lists.lyx.org Subject: Re: use of \citet (with natbib numeric) gives (author?) error On 07/13/2011 05:58 AM, Matthias Hunstig wrote: Hello, I am using LyX 2.0 and just switched the citation style to Natbib (numeric) because I want to use \citet from time to time. However, whenever I use \citet, a bold *(author?)* appears in the PDF instead of the author name. The source code looks fine to me, for example: \citet[p.~223]{watson_2009} Any idea what causes this? This kind of thing is usually due to problems with the .bib file, and the problem is usually the presence of Unicode characters gotten from pasting a reference from the web or something. If you use bibtex for the processor, then the file really needs to be ASCII; if you use bibtex8, you can get away with 8-bit encodings; but Unicode needs special treatment and is not presently recommended. Richard
Re: use of \citet (with natbib numeric) gives (author?) error
On 07/14/2011 07:37 AM, Matthias Hunstig wrote: Hello Richard, thanks for the answer. I do not think it is a Unicode problem because I generate the bibtex file from Zotero using IS0-8859-15 which has worked before. Also, all author names appear fine in the bibliography itself. Even those with special characters such as ï. This does not mean that they are handled properly by the algorithms that create the citations. I would suggest you at least try this with a sanitized BibTeX file. rh Any other ideas? Matthias -Original Message- From: Richard Heck [mailto:rgh...@comcast.net] Sent: Wednesday, July 13, 2011 3:40 PM To: Matthias Hunstig Cc: lyx-users@lists.lyx.org Subject: Re: use of \citet (with natbib numeric) gives (author?) error On 07/13/2011 05:58 AM, Matthias Hunstig wrote: Hello, I am using LyX 2.0 and just switched the citation style to Natbib (numeric) because I want to use \citet from time to time. However, whenever I use \citet, a bold *(author?)* appears in the PDF instead of the author name. The source code looks fine to me, for example: \citet[p.~223]{watson_2009} Any idea what causes this? This kind of thing is usually due to problems with the .bib file, and the problem is usually the presence of Unicode characters gotten from pasting a reference from the web or something. If you use bibtex for the processor, then the file really needs to be ASCII; if you use bibtex8, you can get away with 8-bit encodings; but Unicode needs special treatment and is not presently recommended. Richard
Re: use of \citet (with natbib numeric) gives (author?) error
On 14/07/2011 7:37 AM, Matthias Hunstig wrote: Hello Richard, thanks for the answer. I do not think it is a Unicode problem because I generate the bibtex file from Zotero using IS0-8859-15 which has worked before.. Also, all author names appear fine in the bibliography itself. Even those with special characters such as ï. Any other ideas? Matthias -Original Message- From: Richard Heck [mailto:rgh...@comcast.net] Sent: Wednesday, July 13, 2011 3:40 PM To: Matthias Hunstig Cc: lyx-users@lists.lyx.org Subject: Re: use of \citet (with natbib numeric) gives (author?) error On 07/13/2011 05:58 AM, Matthias Hunstig wrote: Hello, I am using LyX 2.0 and just switched the citation style to Natbib (numeric) because I want to use \citet from time to time. However, whenever I use \citet, a bold *(author?)* appears in the PDF instead of the author name. The source code looks fine to me, for example: \citet[p.~223]{watson_2009} Any idea what causes this? This kind of thing is usually due to problems with the .bib file, and the problem is usually the presence of Unicode characters gotten from pasting a reference from the web or something. If you use bibtex for the processor, then the file really needs to be ASCII; if you use bibtex8, you can get away with 8-bit encodings; but Unicode needs special treatment and is not presently recommended. Richard You also need to use a natbib-compatible bibliography style. You select this by clicking on your BibTeX Generated Bibliography in your LyX document and selecting e.g. plainnat -- Julien
RE: use of \citet (with natbib numeric) gives "(author?)" error
Hello Richard, thanks for the answer. I do not think it is a Unicode problem because I generate the bibtex file from Zotero using IS0-8859-15 which has worked before. Also, all author names appear fine in the bibliography itself. Even those with special characters such as "ï". Any other ideas? Matthias > -Original Message- > From: Richard Heck [mailto:rgh...@comcast.net] > Sent: Wednesday, July 13, 2011 3:40 PM > To: Matthias Hunstig > Cc: lyx-users@lists.lyx.org > Subject: Re: use of \citet (with natbib numeric) gives "(author?)" error > > On 07/13/2011 05:58 AM, Matthias Hunstig wrote: > > Hello, > > > > I am using LyX 2.0 and just switched the citation style to Natbib (numeric) > because I want to use \citet from time to time. > > > > However, whenever I use \citet, a bold *(author?)* appears in the PDF > > instead of the author name. The source code looks fine to me, for > > example: \citet[p.~223]{watson_2009} > > > > Any idea what causes this? > > > This kind of thing is usually due to problems with the .bib file, and the > problem is usually the presence of Unicode characters gotten from pasting a > reference from the web or something. If you use bibtex for the processor, > then the file really needs to be ASCII; if you use bibtex8, you can get away > with 8-bit encodings; but Unicode needs special treatment and is not > presently recommended. > > Richard
Re: use of \citet (with natbib numeric) gives "(author?)" error
On 07/14/2011 07:37 AM, Matthias Hunstig wrote: > Hello Richard, > > thanks for the answer. I do not think it is a Unicode problem because I > generate the bibtex file from Zotero using IS0-8859-15 which has worked > before. Also, all author names appear fine in the bibliography itself. Even > those with special characters such as "ï". > This does not mean that they are handled properly by the algorithms that create the citations. I would suggest you at least try this with a sanitized BibTeX file. rh > Any other ideas? > > Matthias > >> -Original Message- >> From: Richard Heck [mailto:rgh...@comcast.net] >> Sent: Wednesday, July 13, 2011 3:40 PM >> To: Matthias Hunstig >> Cc: lyx-users@lists.lyx.org >> Subject: Re: use of \citet (with natbib numeric) gives "(author?)" error >> >> On 07/13/2011 05:58 AM, Matthias Hunstig wrote: >>> Hello, >>> >>> I am using LyX 2.0 and just switched the citation style to Natbib (numeric) >> because I want to use \citet from time to time. >>> However, whenever I use \citet, a bold *(author?)* appears in the PDF >>> instead of the author name. The source code looks fine to me, for >>> example: \citet[p.~223]{watson_2009} >>> >>> Any idea what causes this? >>> >> This kind of thing is usually due to problems with the .bib file, and the >> problem is usually the presence of Unicode characters gotten from pasting a >> reference from the web or something. If you use bibtex for the processor, >> then the file really needs to be ASCII; if you use bibtex8, you can get away >> with 8-bit encodings; but Unicode needs special treatment and is not >> presently recommended. >> >> Richard
Re: use of \citet (with natbib numeric) gives "(author?)" error
On 14/07/2011 7:37 AM, Matthias Hunstig wrote: Hello Richard, thanks for the answer. I do not think it is a Unicode problem because I generate the bibtex file from Zotero using IS0-8859-15 which has worked before.. Also, all author names appear fine in the bibliography itself. Even those with special characters such as "ï". Any other ideas? Matthias -Original Message- From: Richard Heck [mailto:rgh...@comcast.net] Sent: Wednesday, July 13, 2011 3:40 PM To: Matthias Hunstig Cc: lyx-users@lists.lyx.org Subject: Re: use of \citet (with natbib numeric) gives "(author?)" error On 07/13/2011 05:58 AM, Matthias Hunstig wrote: Hello, I am using LyX 2.0 and just switched the citation style to Natbib (numeric) because I want to use \citet from time to time. However, whenever I use \citet, a bold *(author?)* appears in the PDF instead of the author name. The source code looks fine to me, for example: \citet[p.~223]{watson_2009} Any idea what causes this? This kind of thing is usually due to problems with the .bib file, and the problem is usually the presence of Unicode characters gotten from pasting a reference from the web or something. If you use bibtex for the processor, then the file really needs to be ASCII; if you use bibtex8, you can get away with 8-bit encodings; but Unicode needs special treatment and is not presently recommended. Richard You also need to use a natbib-compatible bibliography style. You select this by clicking on your "BibTeX Generated Bibliography" in your LyX document and selecting e.g. plainnat -- Julien
Re: use of \citet (with natbib numeric) gives (author?) error
On 07/13/2011 05:58 AM, Matthias Hunstig wrote: Hello, I am using LyX 2.0 and just switched the citation style to Natbib (numeric) because I want to use \citet from time to time. However, whenever I use \citet, a bold *(author?)* appears in the PDF instead of the author name. The source code looks fine to me, for example: \citet[p.~223]{watson_2009} Any idea what causes this? This kind of thing is usually due to problems with the .bib file, and the problem is usually the presence of Unicode characters gotten from pasting a reference from the web or something. If you use bibtex for the processor, then the file really needs to be ASCII; if you use bibtex8, you can get away with 8-bit encodings; but Unicode needs special treatment and is not presently recommended. Richard
Re: use of \citet (with natbib numeric) gives (author?) error
On 07/13/2011 05:58 AM, Matthias Hunstig wrote: Hello, I am using LyX 2.0 and just switched the citation style to Natbib (numeric) because I want to use \citet from time to time. However, whenever I use \citet, a bold *(author?)* appears in the PDF instead of the author name. The source code looks fine to me, for example: \citet[p.~223]{watson_2009} Any idea what causes this? This kind of thing is usually due to problems with the .bib file, and the problem is usually the presence of Unicode characters gotten from pasting a reference from the web or something. If you use bibtex for the processor, then the file really needs to be ASCII; if you use bibtex8, you can get away with 8-bit encodings; but Unicode needs special treatment and is not presently recommended. Richard
Re: use of \citet (with natbib numeric) gives "(author?)" error
On 07/13/2011 05:58 AM, Matthias Hunstig wrote: > Hello, > > I am using LyX 2.0 and just switched the citation style to Natbib (numeric) > because I want to use \citet from time to time. > > However, whenever I use \citet, a bold *(author?)* appears in the PDF instead > of the author name. The source code looks fine to me, for example: > \citet[p.~223]{watson_2009} > > Any idea what causes this? > This kind of thing is usually due to problems with the .bib file, and the problem is usually the presence of Unicode characters gotten from pasting a reference from the web or something. If you use bibtex for the processor, then the file really needs to be ASCII; if you use bibtex8, you can get away with 8-bit encodings; but Unicode needs special treatment and is not presently recommended. Richard