Thanks. This is very useful. Vikas
On Sat, Jul 17, 2021 at 03:55:18PM +0200, András Simonyi wrote: > Dear Vikas, > > the CSL-based processor is in a bit of a flux in this respect, but as > for the natbib and biblatex processors I've extracted these > correspondences from the oc source code, which you might find useful. > (With the exception of the first, "fully nil" styles, one always has > to use the "/" separator between "cite" and the listed combinations, > for the default styles this means a double slash, e.g., [cite//b@key] > leads to \citealp{key} using the natbib processor. > > * Natbib > > ;; default style. > --> \citep > / [bare|b] --> \citealp > / [caps|c] --> \Citep > / [full|f] --> \citep* > / [bare-caps|bc] --> \Citealp > / [bare-full|bf] --> \citealp* > / [caps-full|cf] --> \Citep* > / [bare-caps-full|bcf] --> \Citealp* > > ;; author style. > [author|a] / [caps|c] --> \Citeauthor > [author|a] / [full|f] --> \citeauthor* > [author|a] --> \citeauthor > > ;; noauthor style > [noauthor|na] / [bare|b] --> \citeyear > [noauthor|na] --> \citeyearpar > > ;; nocite style. > [nocite|n] --> \nocite > > ;; text style. > [text|t] / [bare|b] --> \citealt > [text|t] / [caps|c] --> \Citet > [text|t] / [full|f] --> \citet* > [text|t] / [bare-caps|bc] --> \Citealt > [text|t] / [bare-full|bf] --> \citealt* > [text|t] / [caps-full|cf] --> \Citet* > [text|t] / [bare-caps-full|bcf] --> \Citealt* > [text|t] --> \citet > > * biblatex > > ;; Default nil style. > --> autocite > / [bare|b] --> cite > / [caps|c] --> Autocite > / [bare-caps|b] --> Cite > > ;; author style. > [author|a] / [caps|c]) --> Citeauthor* > [author|a] / [full|f]) --> citeauthor > [author|a] / [caps-full|cf] --> Citeauthor > [author|a] --> citeauthor* > > ;; locators style. > [locators|l] / [bare|b] --> notecite > [locators|l] / [caps|c] --> Pnotecite > [locators|l] / [bare-caps|bc] --> Notecite > [locators|l] --> pnotecite > > ;; noauthor style. > [noauthor|na] --> autocite* > > ;; nocite style. > [nocite|n] --> nocite > > ;; text style. > [text|t] / [caps|c]) --> Textcite > [text|t] --> textcite > > best regards, > András > > > On Sat, 17 Jul 2021 at 13:41, Vikas Rawal <vikasra...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > I have been a long time user of org-ref and am excited to see the > > development of org-cite. Thanks a lot for this, Nicholas and others > > who have been working on this. I have been wanting to give it a spin > > for the last few days and finally got down to doing it. > > > > I am aware that the documentation is still in the works and therefore > > my apologies in advance if asking these questions is premature. I have > > looked at Nicholas' mails which provide basic documentation and have > > been trying to follow these. > > > > What is the equivalent here of the various citation commands that something > > like biblatex or bibtex provide? The two most common citation commands I > > use are citet and citep (or parencite). These are used to produce the > > following kind of output using org-ref/biblatex: > > > > > > ----- > > * citet > > > > citet:john is an excellent resource. > > > > will be exported as: > > > > John (1990) is an excellent resource. > > > > * citep > > > > This is an excellent resource citep:john. > > > > will be exported as > > > > This is an excellent resource (John, 1990). > > > > ---- > > > > How does one achieve this using org-cite? > > > > I am a bit lost with the citation styles that are inbuilt in > > oc-biblatex.el. Is it expected that we will have to write additional > > citation styles for getting these kinds of output? > > > > Apologies if this is a naive or a premature question. > > > > Many thanks to everyone. > > > > Vikas > > >