On Fri, Jan 20, 2012 at 10:05 AM, Bruce D'Arcus <[email protected]> wrote:

> 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.
>

With the caveat that formatted bibliographic entries are often lossy, so it
might be desirable to parse the entry, use the component parts to identify
the item (e.g. via CrossRef's lookup tools), retrieve more complete
bibliographic data for the item (e.g., once you know the DOI, you could
resolve it and scrape that page; this could be done with server-side Zotero
translators:
http://forums.zotero.org/discussion/19458/translators-server-side/ ), and
run that more complete bibliographic data through the CSL processor for all
styles.

Rintze
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Keep Your Developer Skills Current with LearnDevNow!
The most comprehensive online learning library for Microsoft developers
is just $99.99! Visual Studio, SharePoint, SQL - plus HTML5, CSS3, MVC3,
Metro Style Apps, more. Free future releases when you subscribe now!
http://p.sf.net/sfu/learndevnow-d2d
_______________________________________________
xbiblio-devel mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/xbiblio-devel

Reply via email to