Am 16.09.2010 um 11:22 schrieb Pierre Morel:
The problems arise when I cite a paper in the French text, such as
"french french french \citep{Author:year} french french french". I
could surround each \citep command by \selectlanguage{english}...
\selectlanguage{french}, but it's certainly not elegant !
Not always. The declaration as French would only be needed in cases
when TeX would hyphenate non-English words at the wrong places.
(That's mainly what Babel or Polyglossia are needed here – except, you
want certain characters mixed into cited titles, names, and years
appear according to French typography rules. Non-French bibliographies
often don't pay so much attention here.)
--
Greetings
Pete
The mathematician who pursues his studies without clear views of this
matter, must often have the uncomfortable feeling that his paper and
pencil surpass him in intelligence.
– Ernst Mach
--------------------------------------------------
Subscriptions, Archive, and List information, etc.:
http://tug.org/mailman/listinfo/xetex