Citation - Chicago Manual of Style
I am in the midst of writing a project for my doctorate and am finding Zotero a joy to use.
I am using Chicago Manual of Style (Full Note with Bibliography) and am finding Zotero is leaving out the final period. When I go back and edit, and then click OK, it puts in the final period.
Am I doing something wrong?
Thanks for your help.
Greg
I am using Chicago Manual of Style (Full Note with Bibliography) and am finding Zotero is leaving out the final period. When I go back and edit, and then click OK, it puts in the final period.
Am I doing something wrong?
Thanks for your help.
Greg
But I also would like to see this one fixed :-)
Thank you!
Any idea when the error will be corrected?
This is NOT an error, please do not correct it. Below is why:
I think Zotero is NOT supposed to put in that final period. If you want to add text after the citation and use a comma, then the period would get in the way. So, putting the period in on your own let's you add your own punctuation, which is absolutely key to footnotes that go beyond merely citing a page number.
I used Endnote for a while and I had to manipulate the styles in order to NOT put in a period, one of the great things about Zotero is that the end punctuation of a footnote is NOT decided for you.
I would find Zotero much less useful if I had to have a period at the end of a citation. What if you want to add more text? Example: "Carlson, _Dynamics of Hamlet_, p. 45 argues that . . . " if there was a period after "45" you couldn't continue your note! The above is just one example, but there many situations where you don't want a period, but a comma, or a semi-colon, or nothing at all.
So, I think it is best that it remain the way it is.
Dan Michon
I see your point, and I had never thought about this in the way you describe. I rarely add comments after the citation.
Greg
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Thank you for pointing out that a simple Zotero refresh would add the missing periods - I hadn't noticed that, but am very very happy that it's so easy to take care of that problem.
Samuelas gives a great solution that I didn't think of. Using Word footnote then just using citation for discursive footnotes. I have been inserting a footnote with Zotero, but I guess I should start using Word to insert then put in a citation because if the next version of Zotero does put in periods, I will have to go back and do that all over again.
I would be interested to know what the Zotero developers are planning to do -- if they are going to put the period in, then I need to stop inserting from the Zotero toolbar asap and start inserting Word footnote.
Anyone know what they are planning to do?
Dan
For that reason, I'd say I'd tend to prefer marisabrandt's approach of using prefix and suffix for short comments. For longer one, I'd create the footnote, and embed the citation(s) within it.
I also think that Zotero should add a period to the first case; what I call "footnoted citations" (as opposed to just citations in footnotes).
I see that this thread is a year old and misses a proper ending. What have the developer decided? Is it going to be left the way it is? I started using Zotero just a few month ago and have experienced the same problem.
I think, if the refresh function does add periods to the end, it should add those periods right away. Else it could mess up your citations if you hit the refresh button at the end (e.g. to correct some minor mistakes in the titles).
From all I have read in this discussion, however, I would argue that periods at the end should be left away alltogether. Still, then it should also not ADD periods after hitting refresh.
Finally, thank so much to all Zotero developers! You have made my academic life so much easier! I love you guys!
Take care,
Markus
And thanks for Zotero. The best citation management program I have ever used.
Greg
As of 7/24/09, the ticket for this known issue says it's closed and that it can't be reproduced, but it happens to me every time I add a citation. I'm using the latest plugin on Word 2002 for Windows XP. I don't know how to reopen a ticket.
Thank you!
What happens if you refresh your document? Is this true for multiple citations as well?
I don't think there can be any question that the period belongs there - the solutions suggested above sound more like hacks than solutions.
Tickets can only be re-opened by people with trac access (i.e. people who are part of the dev team broadly speaking).
Last night I updated to 2.0b7 and 3.0a1. Zotero refreshed all the past notations and added a period after every one! This means that there are hundreds (perhaps thousands) of periods that now must be deleted manually. The extraneous periods occur before other periods, commas, and semi-colons.
Is this a bug that can be fixed, or do I have to go back and manually delete hundreds of periods via the editor?
I would strongly prefer that Zotero NOT automatically add periods after citations.
this seems like something that search and replace can take care of in 5mins.
And the behavior that does add periods is in line with standard Zotero behavior and should have been there all along. The crucial argument here is switching between different styles.
Bottom line: the periods need to come out unless Zotero offers the option to suppress it without orphaning the citation from the database.
The main point here is that the period is *inside the footnote field*!
For one thing it can only be deleted by opening the editor inside the edit citation window otherwise the period will revert during a refresh. So I'm afraid yes, adamsmith, manually edit in every case and it's not even as simple as just deleting the period! Poor anaselli--I hope it's a short document.
However, albeit a big problem, it's only a one time problem. So if it were the right thing to do, then of course Zotero should still insert the periods. But it's not the right thing to do!
The far more important problem is that once you edit the footnote you orphan it from the database. But what if there is an error in the database that you go back and correct? Then all of the footnotes are updated during a refresh except the orphaned footnote. Uhhh, where was that footnote again?
It cannot be acceptable that Zotero force a citation to be orphaned from the database in the normal course of writing! It defeats the whole purpose of having bibliographic software and makes EndNote look like a great deal.
marisabrandt's is not a viable solution. In the books I read and in the papers I write I often find footnotes with multiple cited sources that may, for example, be listed with commas separating the sources--no periods following. Every one of these creates an orphaned citation.
By the way, this is the same problem that results from the fact that Zotero does not recognize the beginning of a new chapter (where some styles require a repeat of the full reference to the source information). The only workaround for that bug is also to insert a citation which is no longer associated with same source data (either manually or via a new Zotero entry).
If it's important to you, just modify the style
all you have to do is to
change
<layout prefix="" suffix="." delimiter="; ">
to
<layout prefix="" suffix="" delimiter="; ">
- less work than writing your post.
http://www.zotero.org/support/dev/citation_styles/style_editing_step-by-step
btw. that should also take care of anaselli's problem, hadn't thought of that before.
Let me know if you have problems with that modification.
As the standard style, however, I continue to maintain that the period should be in there. If I insert a simple citation using Zotero it should be correct without me going into the footnote and modifying it. Without the period it's not.
Also, if I want to switch from Chicago style to e.g. APSA style I should be able to do that with one click (well, OK, it's three clicks, but you get the point) - one of the important stated goals of csl - with the period added manually that is not the case.
Thank you.
and http://steveridout.com/csl/searchByName/ to edit a style in the "visual editor"
Edit: My bad.. It works now. Thanks.