Due to how I imported some references a number of years ago, I have several varieties of keyword lists. Some are like this:
Keyword; keyword2; keyword3
. . . and others like this:
Keyword keyword2 keyword3
Using the global change function, is it possible to change '; ' with a line break?
breaking up keyword lists
Re: breaking up keyword lists
Sure. Search for
;
and replace with ¬ (that's Option-J on a US keyboard -- it will insert a return in its place).
As always, make a COPY of your library before doing this in case something goes wrong, it's not undoable.
Jon
Sonny Software
;
and replace with ¬ (that's Option-J on a US keyboard -- it will insert a return in its place).
As always, make a COPY of your library before doing this in case something goes wrong, it's not undoable.
Jon
Sonny Software
Re: breaking up keyword lists
On the same topic: is there a way to export keywords as a comma separated string in BibTeX? Bookends uses a ; which Biber does not recognize and which render keywords unusable for filtering bibliography.
Re: breaking up keyword lists
Bookends does that because keywords can contain commas. You can either post-process with find/replace in a text editor (which is what I imagine you do now). Or, if you don't care about using the keywords in Bookends as intended (meaning having a Keyword term list, autocomplete entry, etc.) you can enter them in Bookends as a comma-separated list. And for the present keywords, you can use Global Change to search for returns and convert to commas (on a COPY of the library, to be safe).
Jon
Sonny Software
Jon
Sonny Software
Re: breaking up keyword lists
Is the semicolon treated as a special character for BibTeX? Or is it just in this particular case? If it's generalizable, I could have Bookends output a comma between keywords if BibTeX Markup was specified for outputting formatted references. But if it's specific to this particular app (Biber) I wouldn't do that.
Jon
Sonny Software
Jon
Sonny Software
Re: breaking up keyword lists
The short answer is: it is generalizable.
Slightly longer answer: it is, in fact, the correct markup. Apparently, semicolons mean nothing to BibTeX/Biber, so all the keywords are treated as a single string (rendering them unusable, so to speak).
Slightly longer answer: it is, in fact, the correct markup. Apparently, semicolons mean nothing to BibTeX/Biber, so all the keywords are treated as a single string (rendering them unusable, so to speak).