I got the subject and also text wrong. (But I hope my intention was clear.) I am really looking for EXISTING in-text CSL styles.
On Friday 06 March 2015 07:27 PM, Rasmus wrote: > Hi, > > Vaidheeswaran C <vaidheeswaran.chinnar...@gmail.com> writes: > > >>> Maybe this: >>> >>> >>> https://github.com/citation-style-language/styles/blob/master/chicago-author-date.csl >> >> I have looked at this style file and I have even written a CSL macro >> for this file. Please tell me how would I create parenthetical styles >> with this CSL file. > > I haven't tested this as I'm using bibtex for my own work. But with > citeproc-java you should be able to do something like: > > citeproc-java -b references.bib -s chicago-author-date -c Fowler_2010 > Kisker_2012 > > To get something like (Fowler 2010; Kisker 2012). > >> The question now is: Who types the author name. The style file >> suppresses the author and it would mean the document author types it, >> right? > > My interpretation of the text is "if you want 'A (Y)' I will type '(Y)' > but you will have to type 'A' — manually(!)". > > However, if you could combine styles you could just switch the '-s' argument > when calling citeproc-java (or a compatible tool). > >> So what toolchain are we looking at. How good we know these >> toolchains to actually integrate Org-mode with it? > > Last resort you could import all references as org-bibtex entries and use > some tool to format information from this. It's much nicer to rely on an > external tool for this, though. > > —Rasmus >