On Thu, May 19, 2011 at 10:07 PM, Bruce D'Arcus <[email protected]> wrote:
> So I don't see this as a CSL style issue, but it might be worth
> raising, because it could be related to a possible CSL API.
>
> Zotero users have periodically requested functionality similar to what
> the bibtex multibib package offers: that is, being able to have
> multi-sectional bibliographies. Possible examples I've seen include:
>
> - primary and secondary sources
> - legal cases and everything else
> - discographies vs. everything else
>
> I would very much like to see this as well.
>
> So you need a way to:
>
> 1. set the heading for these sections
> 2. to define which references get printed where

Is (2) alone sufficient? It would be awkward to require modifications
to the style or the locale in order to change a bibliography heading.

>
> To me, the cleanest, most flexible, way to do this is via some sort of
> tag filtering, completely independently of CSL. For example, some way
> to say either a source or a reference belongs to the group "primary"
> and then being able to place a bibliography that prints all items
> within that group.
>
> In any case, I'd ideally like a solution that is the same conceptually
> whether we're talking GUI apps like Zotero and Mendeley, or text-based
> formats like markdown (pandoc).
>
> Any thoughts?
>
> Bruce
>
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What Every C/C++ and Fortran developer Should Know!
Read this article and learn how Intel has extended the reach of its 
next-generation tools to help Windows* and Linux* C/C++ and Fortran 
developers boost performance applications - including clusters. 
http://p.sf.net/sfu/intel-dev2devmay
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