> In most cases, the citations I end up with do not contain full citation > information--although SOME do, which is very confusing. I don't know where > the full information is coming from in these cases.
This means that efforts to use citeulike and BD with JSTOR will be less productive than using SSCI. The frames idea was related to this. Again, if citeulike behaves unreliably it is probably better to stick with SSCI, which has done a good job for me. A third way is to have Google Scholar in the Web group, click "Import to BibTex" links and copy-paste the code to your library. On 17/11/2007, Ingrid Giffin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >On 11/17/07 3:58 AM, "Christiaan Hofman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >> On 17 Nov 2007, at 10:08 AM, Ingrid Giffin wrote: > >>> On 11/16/07 4:10 AM, "François Briatte" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > >>> A lot of stuff can be imported through citeulike, including JSTOR, or any > >>> journals website (x). I have described the (x) --> (citeulike) --> > >>> BibDesk > >>> routine here: http://phnk.com/blog/tech/citeulike-and- bibdesk/ (slightly > >>> outdated, search archives in list for discussion). > > >> Within my browser, I have tried the citeulike routine described on your > >> web > >> page, but if I click the citulike bookmarklet while I am on the JSTOR > >> article > >> page, I get incomplete citations; for instance, the author name and title, > >> but no date or other information. If I click all the way through on JSTOR > >> to > >> the BibTex citation page (where I get the complete citation), by that time > >> there's no point in going through citeulike--it's just as easy to drag to > >> BibDesk. > >> > > > > It can well be that the JSTOR data does not contain all the > > information or that we do not include all the available information > > from JSTOR. For bibTeX we do include all the information, as it is > > our native format. > > > > But which citeulike routine are you referring to, and which web site > > are you searching? > > > > Christiaan > > It's not a JSTOR problem per se, it's trying to figure out how François is > using Citeulike to save steps. > > Here are my steps: > In the browser (not within BD), > 1. Perform a search on JSTOR. > 2. Click to one article's page. (This is presumably the problem, because > this page does not contain full citation information.) > 3. Click Citulike bookmarklet. > 4. Do this with a bunch of articles. > 5. Go to "My Library" on Citulike web site. > 6. Export BibText. > 7. Open BibText file. > 8. Drag contents to BD. > > In most cases, the citations I end up with do not contain full citation > information--although SOME do, which is very confusing. I don't know where > the full information is coming from in these cases. > > If I use the JSTOR "save citation" function and then use JSTOR's BibTex > export, the full citation information is all there. Again, this is just > trying to figure out François' workflow, to avoid the number of clicks on > JSTOR to get the citations. > > More below: > > >>> This routine can be used within BD if you create a page with a frame, > >>> where the top frame has the citeulike bookmarklet and the lower frame > >>> has JSTOR or any other citeulike-supported website. > >> > >> Could you explain exactly what you mean by creating a "page with a frame"? > >> --and how you get the two to have different contents? > > > > A web page can consist of several sub-pages called frames, which load > > a separate URL. You can reload a subpage separately, and we have to > > make sure we scan reloaded subframes while the main page remains the > > same. > > I know about web frames, but how then do you mean, "used within BD"? You are > creating a personal web page with frames? And then loading that in the BD > Web search window? > > And how does the top frame have the Citulike bookmarklet? My bookmarklet is > installed in the browser itself as a clickable bookmark-toolbar link, and > does not live on a web page. > Thanks, > Ingrid > > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------- > This SF.net email is sponsored by: Microsoft > Defy all challenges. Microsoft(R) Visual Studio 2005. > http://clk.atdmt.com/MRT/go/vse0120000070mrt/direct/01/ > _______________________________________________ > Bibdesk-users mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bibdesk-users > ------------------------------------------------------------------------- This SF.net email is sponsored by: Microsoft Defy all challenges. Microsoft(R) Visual Studio 2005. http://clk.atdmt.com/MRT/go/vse0120000070mrt/direct/01/ _______________________________________________ Bibdesk-users mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bibdesk-users
