On Fri, Jan 20, 2012 at 9:35 AM, Sylvester Keil <[email protected]> wrote:

> I wrote anystyle-parser as a freecite replacement; my idea, going forward, 
> was to turn it into a web service, like freecite, too. The ML model and the 
> feature dictionary was optimized for my use cases, but could be easily 
> improved.

So just to clarify, the relevance here is in this approach, we'd need
a really smart parser, that would allow us to deconstruct a formatting
bibliographic entry into their component parts, and then to match that
against CSL macros fragments, to piece together a new style.

This library can provide that.

...

> Also, in rewriting citeproc-ruby I have started to extract all the CSL 
> functionality into a separate multi-purpose CSL API. This could be extremely 
> useful for a style editor, obviously, but it's far from finished.
>
> https://github.com/inukshuk/csl-ruby

I was wondering about that. So what's the relationship between the
rewritten citeproc-ruby an csl-ruby?

Bruce

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