Reference Appears to Have a Duplicate, though it doesn't. Shows up as "2006a" instead of "2006."
Hello,
I've searched the forums but haven't found my specific question answered. If there's a relevant discussion already I'd be happy for the link.
I'm using an author-date citation style that looks like this in footnotes: Gäbel 2006a:310–11.
My problem is that, as for instance with this book by Gäbel, Zotero is adding "a" to the year as though this were the first of multiple works by this author in this year. I *think* I may have accidentally had a duplicate of this item at one stage, but it has long since been deleted. As far as I can tell, in my entire Zotero library there is only one work by this author in this year. Yet still the "a" persists. I have double-checked my library and hit "Zotero refresh" in the document, but to no avail.
Is there some way to get the "a" out of all my references to this work? It's probably the most-cited secondary source in my entire thesis, so I'd hate to do a manual work-around. And this isn't the only work that this is happening to.
Very many thanks in advance,
Bobby
I've searched the forums but haven't found my specific question answered. If there's a relevant discussion already I'd be happy for the link.
I'm using an author-date citation style that looks like this in footnotes: Gäbel 2006a:310–11.
My problem is that, as for instance with this book by Gäbel, Zotero is adding "a" to the year as though this were the first of multiple works by this author in this year. I *think* I may have accidentally had a duplicate of this item at one stage, but it has long since been deleted. As far as I can tell, in my entire Zotero library there is only one work by this author in this year. Yet still the "a" persists. I have double-checked my library and hit "Zotero refresh" in the document, but to no avail.
Is there some way to get the "a" out of all my references to this work? It's probably the most-cited secondary source in my entire thesis, so I'd hate to do a manual work-around. And this isn't the only work that this is happening to.
Very many thanks in advance,
Bobby
1. Insert a new citation of that item -- as you search for it in the quick format bar (the one with the red border), you'll see it listed both under "Cited" and under "My Library". Insert the one under "My Library."
2. Note which version of the cite that is -- 2006a or 2006b
3. Let's assume it's 2006b for simplicity; otherwise just flip the labels below
4. Now replace all instances of that item with 2006a in the same way: delete them, then re-insert, making sure to select the item from under "My Library".
5. Once you're done with that, the a/b should disappear and you should be left with a single item.
So I've elminated all the "2006b" entries by deleting them and re-entering the source from my library. Now, only "2006a" entries are left in the document. But it's still "2006a" when it should be "2006." Any help getting rid of that? I've hit Zotero refresh; no dice.
Many thanks,
Bobby
Two things that might help you find this is showing field codes:
https://www.zotero.org/support/kb/word_field_codes
and switching to a numeric citation style like IEEE (because that'll let you pinpoint the relative location of that stray cite.)
Just to be clear, after showing field codes (and switching to IEEE but inconclusively?), there are no 2006b references showing up. Many thanks for your help.
https://www.zotero.org/support/word_processor_plugin_usage#document_preferences
I've changed the doc prefs to IEEE, and have toggled field view. Now, the first entry shows up as item 4, and the second as item 131, but I can't seem to find a place where the work is actually cited in the version indicated by item 131. Does that make sense?
As to finding a stray field code, what exactly am I looking for?
When you show field codes, you should see, for each citation, a bunch of Zotero code appearing, starting with
ADDIN ZOTERO_ITEM CSL_CITATION
. You're looking for some of that type of code appearing where you're not seeing a citation.In the bibliography I see 346 numbered entries. This seems to be the total number of works cited, not the total number of citations, since, e.g., work [4] shows up all over the place.
The citations are numbered sequentially by the first time they appear. That means you can just scroll through your document and eyeball where you're in the 130s -- yes there are going to be some lower numbers mixed in (from items that are re-cited), but this really can't be hard to find.
If you do want to use search, presumably, also searching for [13 will pretty quickly get you to the first hits in the 130s.