Basically, my motivations are sa follows. No one as far as I can tell has produced a bibtex style which conforms to the Australian legal citation standard, the proper acronym escapes me for the moment.
I decided that fiddling around with the bibtex language was no fun and pretty time consuming so I though I should be able to piece together some sort of solution in Haskell. On Apr 8, 2005 8:51 AM, Jeremy Gibbons <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hi there. I saw Doaitse's reply about a parser, but I'd be interested > in anything else you hear too. Will you post a summary to the Haskell > list? > > You know about Filliatre's bibtex2html, I presume? It isn't a > replacement for bibtex, but it runs bibtex and uses the output via an > OCaml program to generate html. > > I'm curious as to what your interest is. > > Cheers, > Jeremy > > On 7 Apr 2005, at 15:18, Thomas Bevan wrote: > > > Does anyone know of any work being done on Latex with Haskell? > > > > I am particularly interested in finding a Haskell replacement to > > Bibtex. > > > > Thanks. > > > > Tom > > _______________________________________________ > > Haskell mailing list > > [email protected] > > http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell > > > > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Oxford University Computing Laboratory, TEL: +44 1865 283508 > Wolfson Building, Parks Road, FAX: +44 1865 273839 > Oxford OX1 3QD, UK. > URL: http://www.comlab.ox.ac.uk/oucl/people/jeremy.gibbons.html > > _______________________________________________ Haskell mailing list [email protected] http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell
