Mendeley Import!
I'm a long time Zotero users and my Twitter feed is overflowing with people who want to switch to Zotero from Mendeley. First problem is they think of Zotero as it was years ago--so Zotero needs a Mendeley/Zotero comparison page.
However, worst issue is how to get Mendeley data into Zotero. I understand some of the problem stems from the Mendeley side but it would be really really great if there was a tool that automated as much of the process as possible and a guide to how to do this. I think it is important for Zotero to step up this moment and help people come over!
However, worst issue is how to get Mendeley data into Zotero. I understand some of the problem stems from the Mendeley side but it would be really really great if there was a tool that automated as much of the process as possible and a guide to how to do this. I think it is important for Zotero to step up this moment and help people come over!
This discussion has been closed.
Mendeley Import:
This is really straightforward:
1. In Mendeley go to all documents, select all, then under files select "Export" and export into bibtex (.bib) format.
1a) Windows users only: Due to a bug in Mendeley's bibtex export you will need to follow my instructions here to correct filepaths in Mendeley's bibtex exports
2. In Zotero, click on the gears menu, select import and select the exported Mendeley .bib file. Import for large libraries may take some time. In rare cases you may get a busy script warning, click continue.
There is a guide with pics here: http://ica.library.oregonstate.edu/tutorials/lesson/631--Advanced-Zotero?mid=26031&type=MiscellaneousResource&uid=1271 the author uses RIS instead of bibtex, which saves Windows users step 1a) but may give you slightly worse data. If you have mainly books and articles the difference likely won't matter.
What this will _not_ import is Folders. The only way to do that is to export/import them individually into Zotero. Since Mendeley doesn't export folders, the only way to import them would be to go through the sqlite directly and that'd require a very significant amount of coding.
Comparison Tables
I find comparison tables made by software companies dishonest - I know they all do it, but I think tables that just show how your product can do everything that other products can and so much are basically a lie (because obviously Mendeley has features that Zotero doesn't and vice versa, same for Endnote, Refworks etc.). I don't think Zotero should join that unfortunate trend.
This by Cambridge:
http://www.jbs.cam.ac.uk/infolib/2012/10/29/zotero-versus-mendeley-2/
or this by UW Madison
http://www.library.wisc.edu/citation-managers/comparison.html
are decent, though those lists outdate fast (see e.g. Aurimas's comment below the Cambridge one and the fact that the UWM says Zotero doesn't support abbreviation lists, which it does since 4.0.
Zotero is a small project - things like that done mostly by volunteers (like Aurimas and me) on the side of our day jobs.
https://forums.zotero.org/discussion/28808/importing-for-former-mendeley-users/#Item_0
Local Mendeley SQLite databases are essentially unusable, with a DB schema that looks like this and data with all sorts of proprietary junk (e.g., "<m:linebreak/>" for newlines in notes), so I don't think trying to use that directly is worth anyone's time (which, being charitable, maybe was the point).
Their BibTeX and RIS output doesn't include unique identifiers, so it's not possible to post-process the output in combination with the database to get items' folders, but an approximate version of that could be done with titles and creators.
https://twitter.com/mrgunn/status/321666531295637505
Colwiz apparently does that, though I'm not sure how well it works.
Again, this would have to be kept objective, so we may need to come up with a list of criteria to test and a proper way of doing it. E.g. I would definitely like to know if Mendeley or Papers outperform Zotero in PDF metadata retrieval. I don't think they do, but we should have an objective way of testing this.
All of this should go into a separate thread though.
If you have several folders, I would recommend doing it one folder at a time.
This may not be ideal, since it can take some time to get organized and re-create the folders in Zotero, but it works.
Is there a way to wipe the Zotero database and start again?
I'll update our mistake re: abbreviation lists! :)
I'm still trying to escape mendeley's clutches, but put off by the hassle of individual folder export-import. Was there any progress made on an automated process / plug-in for this?
Just checking in, as I heading into a writing phase - what's the timeline looking like for a plug-in?
Cheers
Emrys
https://forums.zotero.org/discussion/30349/import-pdfs-from-mendeley-to-zotero/#Item_19
there's an updated version of the comparison table Zotero vs Mendeley by Cambridge - only published this week:
http://www.blogs.jbs.cam.ac.uk/infolib/2013/11/12/zotero-versus-mendeley-3/
- Zotero also works with Opera now
- It's a plugin, but ZotFile can extract annotations made in most popular PDF viewers = you choose where you want to annotate your PDFs
- Zotero's mobile site is quite good, so you can pretty much use it as a mobile client for browsing/editing metadata and accessing file attachments (if they are stored on zotero.org)
- "Can automatically re-name and organise PDFs". Again, ZotFile can do this for Zotero as well
- Exporting directly from databases (save as you browse) is a bit misleading since that list is far far far from complete and is missing some big players like EBSCOhost and most of the life science journal websites. So maybe include an ellipsis or "Many more..."
Edit (adamsmith's suggestions):