Bibtex Entry Types, Field Types and Usage HintsA printer friendly PDF version of this page is
available This document is simply a corrected version of Appendix B.2 of the LATEX book [2], © 1986, by Addison-Wesley. The basic scheme is the same, only a few details have changed. [These are the defacto standard for bibliographic data types. The advise is for the use of the LATEX text processing application but there is some general hints as well. - David Wilson] 1 Entry TypesWhen entering a reference in the database, the first thing to decide is what type of entry it is. No fixed classification scheme can be complete, but provides enough entry types to handle almost any reference reasonably well. References to different types of publications contain different information; a reference to a journal article might include the volume and number of the journal, which is usually not meaningful for a book. Therefore, database entries of different types have different fields. For each entry type, the fields are divided into three classes:
The following are the standard entry types, along with their required and optional fields, that are used by the standard bibliography styles. The fields within each class (required or optional) are listed in order of occurrence in the output, except that a few entry types may perturb the order slightly, depending on what fields are missing. These entry types are similar to those adapted by Brian Reid from the classification scheme of van Leunen [4] for use in the Scribe system. The meanings of the individual fields are explained in the next section. Some nonstandard bibliography styles may ignore some optional fields in creating the reference. Remember that, when used in the bib file, the entry-type name is preceded by an @ character.
In addition to the fields listed above, each entry type also has an
optional key field, used in some styles for alphabetizing,
for cross referencing, or for forming a 2 FieldsBelow is a description of all fields recognized by the standard bibliography styles. An entry can also contain other fields, which are ignored by those styles.
3 Helpful HintsThis section gives some random tips that aren't documented elsewhere, at least not in this detail. They are, roughly, in order of least esoteric to most. First, however, a brief spiel. I understand that there's often little choice in choosing a bibliography style--journal says you must use 2018;style2019; and that's that. If you have a choice, however, I strongly recommend that you choose something like the plain standard style. Such a style, van Leunen [4] argues convincingly, encourages better writing than the alternatives--more concrete, more vivid. The Chicago Manual of Style [1], on the other hand, espouse the author-date system, in which the citation might appear in the text as `(Jones, 1986)'. I argue that this system, besides cluttering up the text with information that may or may not be relevant, encourages the passive voice and vague writing. Furthermore the strongest arguments for using the author-date system--like ``it's the most practical''--fall flat on their face with the advent of computer-typesetting technology. For instance the Chicago Manual contains, right in the middle of page 401, this anachronism: ``The chief disadvantage of [a style like plain] is that additions or deletions cannot be made after the manuscript is typed without changing numbers in both text references and list.'' LATEX, obviously, sidesteps the disadvantage. Finally, the logical deficiencies of the author-date style are quite evident once you've written a program to implement it. For example, in a large bibliography, using the standard alphabetizing scheme, the entry for `(Aho et al., 1983b)' might be half a page later than the one for `(Aho et al., 1983a)'. Fixing this problem results in even worse ones. What a mess. (I have, unfortunately, programmed such a style, and if you're saddled with an unenlightened publisher or if you don't buy my propaganda, it's available from the Rochester style collection.) Ok, so the spiel wasn't very brief; but it made me feel better, and now my blood pressure is back to normal. Here are the tips for using with the standard styles (although many of them hold for nonstandard styles, too).
Bibliography
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