On 1 June 2013 22:02, Jürgen Spitzmüller <sp...@lyx.org> wrote:

> Ray Rashif wrote:
> > OK so it's like this:
> >
> > <example>
> > Those using LaTeX are more productive than their traditional
> counterparts.¹
> >
> > ---
> > ¹ John, 1999
> >
> > ...
> >
> > References
> > -----------------
> > John, D. (1999). Proceedings of the ...
> > </example>
> >
> > If so, I've seen this in quite a few organisational publications, though
> > they use per-chapter bibliography.
>
> Well, sure, this is completely common in the humanities. This is the usual
> author-year ("harvard") style which you can produce with natbib, jurabib or
> biblatex. I do not understand what should be so special about it.
>
> Jürgen
>

Ahh, then I got it all wrong. But I guess you guys know what he's talking
about more or less. I think he just wants to cite in his chosen style and
enter bibliography items manually at the end of the document. But I still
don't get why the "label" should be a problem since it's internal to LyX --
he can choose to ignore it since it won't show up in the output.


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