Am Samstag, 9. Februar 2013, 12:20:47 schrieb Ray Rashif:
I was writing a script to do this but I wonder if there's actually some
button or script somewhere I could use?
--
GPG/PGP ID: C0711BF1
Not sure I got your question.
Is it, that you have a bib file (e.g. in Jabref) from which you
One way to go about it is to use bibtool to extract all the references
your article/book uses from your aux file and dump them in a new .bib file.
Then you can use grep on the @ character to count them. Not foolproof but
should get you fairly close. Or you can open the new bib file in a bibtex
On 10 February 2013 01:33, stefano franchi stefano.fran...@gmail.comwrote:
One way to go about it is to use bibtool to extract all the references
your article/book uses from your aux file and dump them in a new .bib file.
Then you can use grep on the @ character to count them. Not foolproof
Am Samstag, 9. Februar 2013, 12:20:47 schrieb Ray Rashif:
I was writing a script to do this but I wonder if there's actually some
button or script somewhere I could use?
--
GPG/PGP ID: C0711BF1
Not sure I got your question.
Is it, that you have a bib file (e.g. in Jabref) from which you
One way to go about it is to use bibtool to extract all the references
your article/book uses from your aux file and dump them in a new .bib file.
Then you can use grep on the @ character to count them. Not foolproof but
should get you fairly close. Or you can open the new bib file in a bibtex
On 10 February 2013 01:33, stefano franchi stefano.fran...@gmail.comwrote:
One way to go about it is to use bibtool to extract all the references
your article/book uses from your aux file and dump them in a new .bib file.
Then you can use grep on the @ character to count them. Not foolproof
Am Samstag, 9. Februar 2013, 12:20:47 schrieb Ray Rashif:
> I was writing a script to do this but I wonder if there's actually some
> button or script somewhere I could use?
>
>
> --
> GPG/PGP ID: C0711BF1
Not sure I got your question.
Is it, that you have a bib file (e.g. in Jabref) from
One way to go about it is to use bibtool to extract all the references
your article/book uses from your aux file and dump them in a new .bib file.
Then you can use grep on the @ character to count them. Not foolproof but
should get you fairly close. Or you can open the new bib file in a bibtex
On 10 February 2013 01:33, stefano franchi wrote:
> One way to go about it is to use bibtool to extract all the references
> your article/book uses from your aux file and dump them in a new .bib file.
> Then you can use grep on the @ character to count them. Not