This bundle provides four BibLaTeX styles that implement (many of) the stipulations and examples provided by the 2014 New Hart's Rules and the 2002 Oxford Guide to Style:
oxnotes
is a style similar to the standardverbose
, intended for use with footnotes;oxnum
is a style similar to the standardnumeric
, intended for use with numeric in-text citations;oxalph
is a style similar to the standardalphabetic
, intended for use with alphabetic in-text citations;oxyear
is a style similar to the standardauthor-year
, intended for use with parenthetical in-text citations.
The bundle provides support for a wide variety of content types, including manuscripts, audiovisual resources, social media and legal references.
The style is designed for use with the musuos class, but it should be usable with other classes, too.
The bundle offers styles that allow authors to use BibLaTeX when preparing papers for submission to the journal Nature.
The package provides a bibliography and citation style which conforms to the latest revision of the international standard ISO 690:2010.
When studying antic and medieval literature, we may find many different texts published with the same title, or, in contrary, the same text published with different titles. To avoid confusion, scholars have published claves, which are books listing ancient texts, identifying them by an identifier --- a number or a string of text. For example, for early Christianity, we have the Bibliotheca Hagiographica Graeca, the Clavis Apocryphorum Novi Testamenti and other claves. It could be useful to print the identifier of a texts in one specific clavis, or in many claves. The package allows us to create new field for different claves, and to present all these fields in a consistent way.
BibLaTeX-unified is an opinionated BibLaTeX implementation of the Unified Stylesheet for Linguistics Journals.
The bundle offers styles that allow authors to use BibLaTeX when preparing papers for submission to the journal Science.
This package provides a bibliography and citation style for BibLaTeX and Biber for typesetting articles for Springer's journals. It is the same as the old BibTeX style spbasic.bst
.
This package is for adding license license:data to bibliography entries via BibLaTeX's built-in related mechanism. It provides a new related type license
and some bibmacros for typesetting these related entries.
The bundle is a small collection of styles for BibLaTeX. It was designed for citations in the Humanities, following the guidelines of style of the institutes for the social sciences of the Leibniz University Hannover/LUH (especially the Institute of Political Science).
This is a BibLaTeX style that implements the Chicago author-date and notes with bibliography style specifications given in the Chicago Manual of Style, 17th edition (with continuing support for the 16th edition, too). The style implements entry types for citing audio-visual materials, among many others.
The package provides a BibLaTeX bibliography style file (.bbx
) for publication lists. The style file draws on BibLaTeX's authoryear
style, but provides some extra features often desired for publication lists, such as the omission of the author's own name from author or editor data.
This small package modifies the BibLaTeX macro which reads a .bbl
file created by Biber. It is thus possible to include a .bbl
file into the main document with the environment
and send it to a publisher who does not need to run the Biber program. However, when the bibliography changes one has to create a new .bbl
file.
Some journals accept the reference list only as \bibitems
. If you use BibTeX, there is no problem: just paste the content of the .bbl
file into your document. However, there was no out-of-the-box way to do the same for BibLaTeX, and you had to struggle with searching appropriate .bst
files, or formatting your reference list by hand, or something like that. Using the workaround provided by this package solves the problem.
The package provides a custom citation-style for typesetting a German law thesis with LaTeX.
This package implements software entry types for BibLaTeX in the form of a bibliography style extension. It requires the Biber backend.
This package provides a BibLaTeX style, based on the Turabian Manual (a version of Chicago).
This package provides the Vancouver reference style for BibLaTeX. It is based on the numeric
style and requires Biber.
The package provides tools to help manage anonymous work with BibLaTeX. It will be useful, for example, in history or classical philology.
Some publishers organize book series with subseries. In this case, two numbers are associated with one volume: the number inside the series and the number inside the subseries. This package provides new fields to manage such system.
This package adds new fields of ``name'' type to the standard entry types of BibLaTeX. For example, maineditor, for a @collection
, means the editor of @mvcollection
, and not the editor of the @collection
.
This package provides a BibLaTeX and Biber cheat sheet.
This package allows using a new field realauthor
, which indicates the real author of a work, when published in a pseudepigraphic name.
The bundle offers two styles --- philosophy-classic
and philosophy-modern
--- that facilitate the production of two different kinds of bibliography, based on the author-year style, with options and features to manage the information about the translation of foreign texts or their reprints. Though the package's default settings are based on the conventions used in Italian publications, these styles can be used with every language recognized by Babel, possibly with some simple redefinitions.