Showing posts with label formats. Show all posts
Showing posts with label formats. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

The structure of author/editor names in publications

As many of you have noticed, BibSonomy stores author (and editor) names in the order "First Last", e.g., "Donald E. Knuth".
For most names that is no problem, but there are also names that get broken by this "feature". For example, for the name of our colleague Beate Navarro Bullock the first name is erronously detected to be "Beate Navarro" but it really is only "Beate".

Such names can be handled correctly by storing them in the "Last, First" order, e.g., "Navarro Bullock, Beate" as it is understood by BibTeX and many other publication management systems.

Therefore, we plan to change BibSonomy's person name handling to always store author and editor names in the "Last, First" format.

For you as our users this has the following consequences:
  • Regardless of whether you enter your names in the "First Last" or "Last, First" format, they are always stored as "Last, First".
  • The post publication form and the BibTeX import will support both "First, Last" and "Last, First".
  • BibSonomy's BibTeX export will contain names in "Last, First" form.
  • All input and output of the "REST-API" will be in "Last, First" form.

There are certainly other things that might change and problems that we might find - we will post them in this blog.

We plan to introduce this change in our after-summer relase in September. We would be very glad to hear your comments or problems you expect.

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

Feature of the Week: Integration of data from the DBLP server

The Digital Bibliography & Library Project (DBLP) is a collection of scientific publications in the field of computer science. DBLP supports listing more than 900,000 articles and is online available on http://dblp.uni-trier.de/. To ease the access of DBLP entries via BibSonomy, we imported about 700,000 references from the DBLP server. The publications are accessible via using the tag 'dblp' (http://www.bibsonomy.org/tag/dblp). In additon, an overview about the DBLP content is available on http://www.bibsonomy.org/user/dblp. After collecting DBLP entries, the user can export the collection in different formats like Endnote, RDF, RTF, BibTex, XML, HTML and RSS.

Have fun, Miranda

Popular Posts