On Mon, May 31, 2021 at 2:11 PM András Simonyi wrote:
>
> Dear All,
>
> I think a useful default/baseline for handling the occurrence of
> multiple #+print_bibliography keywords would be to implement the
> "chapter use case", which, for each #+print_bibliography, would
> collect only the
Dear All,
I think a useful default/baseline for handling the occurrence of
multiple #+print_bibliography keywords would be to implement the
"chapter use case", which, for each #+print_bibliography, would
collect only the citations occurring after to previous
#+print_bibliography (if there is
"Bruce D'Arcus" writes:
> So two duplicate lists.
>
> Does that clarify?
Indeed, thanks.
> The other common case I am familiar with is a bibliography per section
> of a document.
>
> It may not be practical to do anything other than current behavior,
> but I was hoping some biblatex experts
On Sat, May 29, 2021 at 11:15 AM Nicolas Goaziou wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
> "Bruce D'Arcus" writes:
>
> >> Bibliography is printed using "\printbibliography" command. Additional
> >> options may be passed to it through a property list attached to the
> >> "print_bibliography" keyword. E.g.,
> >>
>
Hello,
"Bruce D'Arcus" writes:
>> Bibliography is printed using "\printbibliography" command. Additional
>> options may be passed to it through a property list attached to the
>> "print_bibliography" keyword. E.g.,
>>
>>#+print_bibliography: :section 2 :heading subbibliography
> I don't
Nicolas, András,
I wanted to pull this example out from oc-biblatex for consideration in oc-csl:
On Tue, May 18, 2021 at 11:45 AM Nicolas Goaziou wrote:
> Bibliography is printed using "\printbibliography" command. Additional
> options may be passed to it through a property list attached to