Converting from Markdown-with-biblatex-commands to LaTeX The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer...
Converting from Markdown-with-biblatex-commands to LaTeX
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Converting from Markdown-with-biblatex-commands to LaTeX
The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are In
Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)Why doesn't Pandoc convert citations correctly from Markdown to LaTeX?Document Bibliographies with CJK and PandocError message converting from markdown to PDFBibLaTeX DeclareCiteCommand: How to check shorthand and citeseen and choose <wrapper> accordingly?Ensuring Pandoc will capitalise 'ibid' nested at the beginning of a footnoteReference the number from a specific footnote later in the documentalign, aligned and R Markdownpandoc tex to docx with biblatexpandoc/markdown: make citations compile to cite instead of autociteHow to avoid strange page breaks in bibliography?Subdivided bibliography with pandoc
How can I use biblatex
commands in a Markdown file (instead of Markdown's native cite commands) and have pandoc
output a .tex
file that preserves those biblatex
commands unchanged?
question disambiguation
My question is distinct from one that may sound similar, where the issue was how to use Markdown's native citation format (e.g., [@mycitation, 23]
) and have pandoc
produce .tex
output that converted those to biblatex
commands (e.g., autocite[23]{mycitation}
).
Also, to be clear, I am not asking how to have pandoc
format the citations for me. In other words, I believe that the answer to my question should not involve pandoc-citeproc
.
motivation
I would like to be able to write in Markdown but take advantage of the range and flexibility of biblatex-chicago
cite commands, which are far more flexible than Markdown (which, for example, does not have a way to reproduce volcite{...}[...]{...}
natively -- that is, without doing it manually as in @mycitation, vol. 1, p. 23
). I would then like to convert those Markdown files to LaTeX that can be processed with xelatex
and biber
.
MWE
Markdown input:
This assertion *must* be cited.^[See volcite{1}[23]{mycitation}.]
Output using pandoc myfile.md -o myfile.tex
(note the escaped curly braces and square brackets):
This assertion emph{must} be cited.footnote{See
volcite{1}{[}23{]}{mycitation}.}
Desired .tex
output:
This assertion emph{must} be cited.footnote{See volcite{1}[23]{mycitation}.}
biblatex citing pandoc markdown
add a comment |
How can I use biblatex
commands in a Markdown file (instead of Markdown's native cite commands) and have pandoc
output a .tex
file that preserves those biblatex
commands unchanged?
question disambiguation
My question is distinct from one that may sound similar, where the issue was how to use Markdown's native citation format (e.g., [@mycitation, 23]
) and have pandoc
produce .tex
output that converted those to biblatex
commands (e.g., autocite[23]{mycitation}
).
Also, to be clear, I am not asking how to have pandoc
format the citations for me. In other words, I believe that the answer to my question should not involve pandoc-citeproc
.
motivation
I would like to be able to write in Markdown but take advantage of the range and flexibility of biblatex-chicago
cite commands, which are far more flexible than Markdown (which, for example, does not have a way to reproduce volcite{...}[...]{...}
natively -- that is, without doing it manually as in @mycitation, vol. 1, p. 23
). I would then like to convert those Markdown files to LaTeX that can be processed with xelatex
and biber
.
MWE
Markdown input:
This assertion *must* be cited.^[See volcite{1}[23]{mycitation}.]
Output using pandoc myfile.md -o myfile.tex
(note the escaped curly braces and square brackets):
This assertion emph{must} be cited.footnote{See
volcite{1}{[}23{]}{mycitation}.}
Desired .tex
output:
This assertion emph{must} be cited.footnote{See volcite{1}[23]{mycitation}.}
biblatex citing pandoc markdown
add a comment |
How can I use biblatex
commands in a Markdown file (instead of Markdown's native cite commands) and have pandoc
output a .tex
file that preserves those biblatex
commands unchanged?
question disambiguation
My question is distinct from one that may sound similar, where the issue was how to use Markdown's native citation format (e.g., [@mycitation, 23]
) and have pandoc
produce .tex
output that converted those to biblatex
commands (e.g., autocite[23]{mycitation}
).
Also, to be clear, I am not asking how to have pandoc
format the citations for me. In other words, I believe that the answer to my question should not involve pandoc-citeproc
.
motivation
I would like to be able to write in Markdown but take advantage of the range and flexibility of biblatex-chicago
cite commands, which are far more flexible than Markdown (which, for example, does not have a way to reproduce volcite{...}[...]{...}
natively -- that is, without doing it manually as in @mycitation, vol. 1, p. 23
). I would then like to convert those Markdown files to LaTeX that can be processed with xelatex
and biber
.
MWE
Markdown input:
This assertion *must* be cited.^[See volcite{1}[23]{mycitation}.]
Output using pandoc myfile.md -o myfile.tex
(note the escaped curly braces and square brackets):
This assertion emph{must} be cited.footnote{See
volcite{1}{[}23{]}{mycitation}.}
Desired .tex
output:
This assertion emph{must} be cited.footnote{See volcite{1}[23]{mycitation}.}
biblatex citing pandoc markdown
How can I use biblatex
commands in a Markdown file (instead of Markdown's native cite commands) and have pandoc
output a .tex
file that preserves those biblatex
commands unchanged?
question disambiguation
My question is distinct from one that may sound similar, where the issue was how to use Markdown's native citation format (e.g., [@mycitation, 23]
) and have pandoc
produce .tex
output that converted those to biblatex
commands (e.g., autocite[23]{mycitation}
).
Also, to be clear, I am not asking how to have pandoc
format the citations for me. In other words, I believe that the answer to my question should not involve pandoc-citeproc
.
motivation
I would like to be able to write in Markdown but take advantage of the range and flexibility of biblatex-chicago
cite commands, which are far more flexible than Markdown (which, for example, does not have a way to reproduce volcite{...}[...]{...}
natively -- that is, without doing it manually as in @mycitation, vol. 1, p. 23
). I would then like to convert those Markdown files to LaTeX that can be processed with xelatex
and biber
.
MWE
Markdown input:
This assertion *must* be cited.^[See volcite{1}[23]{mycitation}.]
Output using pandoc myfile.md -o myfile.tex
(note the escaped curly braces and square brackets):
This assertion emph{must} be cited.footnote{See
volcite{1}{[}23{]}{mycitation}.}
Desired .tex
output:
This assertion emph{must} be cited.footnote{See volcite{1}[23]{mycitation}.}
biblatex citing pandoc markdown
biblatex citing pandoc markdown
asked 5 hours ago
Alex RobertsAlex Roberts
665311
665311
add a comment |
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
No need to use Pandoc, you can use the Markdown package:
documentclass{article}
usepackage{biblatex}
usepackage[hybrid,inlineFootnotes]{markdown}
begin{document}
begin{markdown}
This assertion *must* be cited.^[See volcite{1}[23]{mycitation}.]
end{markdown}
end{document}
The hybrid
package option enables the TeX commands, inlineFootnotes
add support for the footnotes. It supports many of the Pandoc extensions, see the manual.
This is the result:
It is also supported by tex4ht
, so you can convert your Markdown + LaTeX document to HTML:
make4ht -us filename.tex "fn-in"
add a comment |
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
No need to use Pandoc, you can use the Markdown package:
documentclass{article}
usepackage{biblatex}
usepackage[hybrid,inlineFootnotes]{markdown}
begin{document}
begin{markdown}
This assertion *must* be cited.^[See volcite{1}[23]{mycitation}.]
end{markdown}
end{document}
The hybrid
package option enables the TeX commands, inlineFootnotes
add support for the footnotes. It supports many of the Pandoc extensions, see the manual.
This is the result:
It is also supported by tex4ht
, so you can convert your Markdown + LaTeX document to HTML:
make4ht -us filename.tex "fn-in"
add a comment |
No need to use Pandoc, you can use the Markdown package:
documentclass{article}
usepackage{biblatex}
usepackage[hybrid,inlineFootnotes]{markdown}
begin{document}
begin{markdown}
This assertion *must* be cited.^[See volcite{1}[23]{mycitation}.]
end{markdown}
end{document}
The hybrid
package option enables the TeX commands, inlineFootnotes
add support for the footnotes. It supports many of the Pandoc extensions, see the manual.
This is the result:
It is also supported by tex4ht
, so you can convert your Markdown + LaTeX document to HTML:
make4ht -us filename.tex "fn-in"
add a comment |
No need to use Pandoc, you can use the Markdown package:
documentclass{article}
usepackage{biblatex}
usepackage[hybrid,inlineFootnotes]{markdown}
begin{document}
begin{markdown}
This assertion *must* be cited.^[See volcite{1}[23]{mycitation}.]
end{markdown}
end{document}
The hybrid
package option enables the TeX commands, inlineFootnotes
add support for the footnotes. It supports many of the Pandoc extensions, see the manual.
This is the result:
It is also supported by tex4ht
, so you can convert your Markdown + LaTeX document to HTML:
make4ht -us filename.tex "fn-in"
No need to use Pandoc, you can use the Markdown package:
documentclass{article}
usepackage{biblatex}
usepackage[hybrid,inlineFootnotes]{markdown}
begin{document}
begin{markdown}
This assertion *must* be cited.^[See volcite{1}[23]{mycitation}.]
end{markdown}
end{document}
The hybrid
package option enables the TeX commands, inlineFootnotes
add support for the footnotes. It supports many of the Pandoc extensions, see the manual.
This is the result:
It is also supported by tex4ht
, so you can convert your Markdown + LaTeX document to HTML:
make4ht -us filename.tex "fn-in"
answered 5 hours ago
michal.h21michal.h21
32.1k447106
32.1k447106
add a comment |
add a comment |
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