> Also, could you point me to a style guide that recommends that type
> of citation?  .

See The Physical Review Style and Notation Guide, Table I:

http://authors.aps.org/STYLE/ms.html#tab

and specifically "How to" instructions (b), (c), (d), (e), (f), and (g).


On 11/05/2007, at 10:31 PM, James Howison wrote:

> Regardless of the taste etc.  How would you represent this in latex?
>
> ie \cite{citekey1,citekey2} is processed as two separate citations,
> leading to two separate bibitems.  I suppose you could tweak the
> bibtex engine (and create a style file without a title), but you'd
> need to come up with an 'in-text' representation that distinguished
> between [1],[2] and [1] --> two articles.
>
> maybe there is something like \citemerge{citekey1,citekey2} in one of
> the alternative citation packages like biblatex, jurabib (doubt it).
> Certainly there isn't in natbib.
>
> Hell I dislike citation styles that abbreviate people's first names,
> so I needn't say anything further on the wisdom of this (don't you
> like to know how many articles backup a point?  Whoops, couldn't help
> myself!).
>
> Anyway the physics community always seems pretty resourceful, so I'm
> sure there's a solution, and we'd love to hear about it if you find  
> it.
>
> Also, could you point me to a style guide that recommends that type
> of citation?  I'd like to forward it to the OpenOffice biblio group
> for their requirements.
>
> Thanks,
> James
>
> On May 11, 2007, at 5:16 AM, Claus Gerhardt wrote:
>
>> Ocassionally I read a paper in physics, and usually I also browse
>> through the references to find interesting articles for further
>> reading which is of course meaningless, if no titles are given.
>>
>> Claus
>>
>>
>> On 11.05.2007, at 09:42, Boris Blankleider wrote:
>>
>>> Gosh! The difference between the styles of references  used in
>>> mathematics and physics
>>> seems to reflect the very difference between  mathematics and
>>> physics:
>>>
>>> Mathematics: dictated by Logic and Taste
>>> Physics: dictated by Pragmatism and Efficiency
>>>
>>> Agree with it or not, the reality is that most physics journals do
>>> not allow the titles of articles
>>> to be included in the reference, and encourage closely related
>>> references to be gathered
>>> into a single citation item.
>>>
>>> Surely BibTex/BibDesk isn't just for mathematicians?
>>>
>>> On 11/05/2007, at 4:09 PM, Claus Gerhardt wrote:
>>>
>>>> I hate these kinds of references which seem to be very popular  
>>>> among
>>>> physicists - fortunately, I never noticed one in a mathematical
>>>> paper.
>>>>
>>>> Logic and taste should dictate
>>>>
>>>> - only one item per reference key (in this case [1])
>>>> - a reference should always contain the title of a paper.
>>>>
>>>> Claus
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On May 11, 2007, at 3:11, Boris Blankleider wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> How do I generate an output like:
>>>>>
>>>>> [1] F. Smith, Phys. Rev. A 21, 333 (1991);  A. Johnson, Phys.
>>>>> Rev. B
>>>>> 22, 444 (1992).
>>>>>
>>>>> That is, one bib item with multiple references?
>>>>>
>>>>>
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