Scrivener + Zotero + LaTeX
Hey guys,
I'm about to start a PhD and I'm looking into my options for writing at the moment. I'm already using zotero to handle sources/citations/documents etc. I was wondering if someone could provide some advice for using the three above tools together:
- Planning/writing in Scrivener
- Using zotero to insert citation keys
- And then outputting to LaTeX for typesetting
I've read everything I can find on using them together, but I'm still unsure how 'well' the three play together, and what exactly the process involves. Could anyone provide a simple description of how the three are used together, what the current level of integration is, and what the caveats might be? (I'm on Windows in case that makes a difference)
Thanks in advance!
I'm about to start a PhD and I'm looking into my options for writing at the moment. I'm already using zotero to handle sources/citations/documents etc. I was wondering if someone could provide some advice for using the three above tools together:
- Planning/writing in Scrivener
- Using zotero to insert citation keys
- And then outputting to LaTeX for typesetting
I've read everything I can find on using them together, but I'm still unsure how 'well' the three play together, and what exactly the process involves. Could anyone provide a simple description of how the three are used together, what the current level of integration is, and what the caveats might be? (I'm on Windows in case that makes a difference)
Thanks in advance!
If you use BetterBibTeX do you still have to use the RTF Scan method? I'm confused as to what the actual process is for using all of these tools together.
If you really want to use LaTeX to typeset, you can instead export a .bib database and then insert BibTeX citekeys into Scrivener. Some tips on this process can be found here:
http://libguides.mit.edu/c.php?g=176000&p=1159208
Zotero can’t natively automatically keep a .bib database in sync with your Zotero library. That is what Better BibTeX does. It also does some other things like ensure stable and non-conflicting citekeys. However, it doesn’t currently work with Zotero 5, so if you want to use that plugin, you will need to install and use Zotero 4.0.
What does it mean? Is the ODF add-on no longer compatible with Zotero 5.0? If so, is there a way around to allow us to work efficiently with Scrivener?
Thanks in advance!
a) install the beta version of the add-on: https://github.com/Juris-M/zotero-odf-scan-plugin/releases/tag/v1.0.34beta (note the installation instructions for Zotero Standalone here: http://zotero-odf-scan.github.io/zotero-odf-scan/)
b) manually install the Scannable Cite translator: Download from here: https://github.com/Juris-M/zotero-odf-scan-plugin/raw/0760cce85b936c6726a1cae05f6e5d9c714db910/resource/translators/Scannable Cite.js
and place into the translators folder in your zotero data directory: https://www.zotero.org/support/zotero_data
restart Zotero.
thank you for your help, but I can't fully follow your instructions. For step 'b', you gave a link that takes me to a page with computer coding in it. Is that what it is supposed to be? I can't find a way to paste that coding into the translators folder in my zotero data directory. Any suggestions?
It worked, in the sense that now the Scannable Cite options is listed in PREFERENCES > EXPORT > DEFAULT FORMAT location.
What is still not showing is the ODF Scan add-on in TOOLS > ADD-ONS > EXTENSIONS location. Does it matter?
I think this is it, right? Anything else I am missing or that I should do?
Thank you so much for your help!
After investing a good amount of time getting up to speed with Scrivener, this was a deal breaker for me, and I switched to LyX (with Zotero & the LyZ plugin) instead. Scrivener is still great for managing a large writing project and composing components of it, but unfortunately it's not very good for scientific/technical writing.