CTAN Comprehensive TeX Archive Network

CTAN Update: biblatex-oxref

Date: February 20, 2019 7:54:00 PM CET
Alex Ball submitted an update to the biblatex-oxref package. Version: 1.1 2019-02-19 License: lppl1.3c Summary description: BibLaTeX styles inspired by the Oxford Guide to Style Announcement text:
- Supporting the multiple variants of the `verbose' citation style from standard biblatex was something of a hack. This has now been done properly with the introduction of dedicated variants `oxnotes-ibid', `oxnotes-inote', `oxnotes-note', `oxnotes-trad1', `oxnotes-trad2', and `oxnotes-trad3'. The happy result of this is that the `citepages' option from the standard `verbose' styles now works properly. The downside is that if you load one of the standard `verbose' citation styles directly (as previously suggested in the manual) you will no longer get the advertised formatting `(pages) at (page)'. (Thanks to moewew for reporting and BT220 for highlighting the issue on TeX.se.) - The test used for deciding if EU cases are singular or plural has been documented and made slightly configurable. - A regression in the formatting of multivolume related items has been fixed. - Some typographical errors in the documentation have been corrected.
The package’s Catalogue entry can be viewed at https://ctan.org/pkg/biblatex-oxref The package’s files themselves can be inspected at http://mirror.ctan.org/macros/latex/contrib/biblatex-contrib/biblatex-oxref/
Thanks for the upload. For the CTAN Team Petra Rübe-Pugliese
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biblatex-oxref – Bib styles inspired by the Oxford Guide to Style

This bundle provides four Bib styles that implement (many of) the stipulations and examples provided by the 2014 New Hart’s Rules and the 2002 Oxford Guide to Style:

  • ‘oxnotes’ is a style similar to the standard ‘verbose’, intended for use with footnotes;
  • ‘oxnum’ is a style similar to the standard ‘numeric’, intended for use with numeric in-text citations;
  • ‘oxalph’ is a style similar to the standard ‘alphabetic’, intended for use with alphabetic in-text citations;
  • ‘oxyear’ is a style similar to the standard ‘author-year’, intended for use with parenthetical in-text citations.

The bundle provides support for a wide variety of content types, including manuscripts, audiovisual resources, social media and legal references.

Packagebiblatex-oxref
Version3.3 2024-08-26
Copyright2016–2023 Alex Ball
MaintainerAlex Ball

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