Org cite - emacs-citar/citar GitHub Wiki
This provides a mapping from possible org-cite style and sub-style names to different export formats.
Style Names and Mappings
For citeproc-org, the asterisk represents a suggested supported style.
| org-cite style | org-cite shortcut | natbib | biblatex | citeproc-org | notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| default (no style) | \citep | \autocite | default | ||
| text | t | \citet | \textcite | * | |
| author | a | \citeauthor | \citeauthor | * | |
| title | ti | \citetitle | * | ||
| year | y | \citeyear | \citeyear | * | |
| locators | l | \pnotecite | * | page numbers and such only (p23) | |
| nocite | n | \nocite | * |
Note that CSL implementations like citeproc-el are based around biblatex autocite-like functionality as default.
The CSL style controls how the default cite command is formatted.
While this is less-flexible than biblatex, for example, it's simpler for the user, as you use the same base command regardless of whether you are using an author-date, numeric, or note-based style.
Variants
A number of citation systems allow styles variants; for example, dropping enclosing punctuation to integrate the full citation in text.
- bare (b) (removes citation enclosing punctuation; for example
cite:locators/bare-> biblatex\notecite) - full (f) (rather than shortened, author list; for example
\citet*) - caps (c) (force initial capitalization)
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