On May 7, 2009, at 12:09 AM, James Owen wrote:
I have been thinking about how to do this, since the original post. My
publications page is indeed generated using the BibDesk export
templating system.
Each publication is marked up like this:
<li class="Pub" id="<$citeKey/>">
<i><$fields.Title.stringByRemovingTeX/></i>
<br />
<span class="Author"><
$
pubAuthors
.abbreviatedname.stringbyremovingt...@componentsjoinedbycommaandand/
></
span><br />
<i><$fields.Journal.stringByRemovingTeX/><i>
<b><$fields.Volume/></b>
<span class="Pages"><$fields.Pages/></span>
(<span class="Date"><$fields.Year/></span>)
<span class="url"><a href="http://dx.doi.org/<$fields.Doi/>"><
$fields.Doi/></a></span>
<span class="Citations"><$fields.Citations/> Citations</span>
</li>
I then use CSS to format the entries. I also played around with having
a fuller reference, including the abstract pop up when the entry was
mousedover. If you wanted to make it searchable, this is helpful as
each field has a corresponding name: Title, Journal, etc.
I like this approach, I'll start here and see what I come up with.
If you made each entry a separate <div>, instead of a <li>, you could
then write some sort of script (php, or javascript?) that would either
display or hide an entry according to some criterion, such as author
name etc. That would give you more the database that you are looking
for. I don't know how to do that though. Anyone?
I've played with this for some things and I was pretty sure <li>'s
could be shown/hidden by scripts also. Maybe that was only for a <dd>
<dt> pair. I'll have to look back over old code.
One other point, however, is that my providing pdfs that your
institution does not have online access to, you may be in breach of
copyright. For this reason, I have used the DOI to generate a link to
the journal pages for each of my papers.
That is a good point, and I'm looking into the restrictions here
through our library. On the one hand, I'm essentially giving them a
copy of my hard copy (since I do have hardcopies of each paper). At
the same time, they do have access, they would just have to request
the item via inter-library loan which would take a day or so. It's not
really giving them something they can't already get, it's just making
the process faster and self-sufficient.
Thanks,
Andrew
******************************************
Andrew M.C. Dawes Assistant Professor
Pacific University Physics Department
2043 College Way Forest Grove, OR 97116
Phone: 503-352-3171 Fax: 503-352-2933
Office: Strain 122-D [email protected]
******************************************
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