Nature RIS files
Hello,
RIS files from Nature magazine wont open with Zotero, even with the "Open RIS files with Zotero" checkbox checked in preferences.
I read some past posts in the forum saying it has something to do with the header Nature puts in their RIS files, but i also read that this problem was to be solved in 2007.
Can anybody help me?
RIS files from Nature magazine wont open with Zotero, even with the "Open RIS files with Zotero" checkbox checked in preferences.
I read some past posts in the forum saying it has something to do with the header Nature puts in their RIS files, but i also read that this problem was to be solved in 2007.
Can anybody help me?
This is an old discussion that has not been active in a long time. Instead of commenting here, you should start a new discussion. If you think the content of this discussion is still relevant, you can link to it from your new discussion.
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v424/n6950/full/nature01799.html
but any article will do the same.
When i click export reference firefox opens the window for saving. In the options there are "Web export helper(default)", which opens with endnote, and Mozilla Firefox, which opens a windows saying:
"C:\Temp\nature01799refs-1.ris could not be opened, because an unknown error occurred. Try saving to disk first and then opening the file."
When i save the file first and open it with firefox he just tries to save it again.
I didnt find/didnt understand what you meant with article icon in the location bar. Is it some place in the Nature magazine's webpage? I couldn't find it. Could you be more specific please?
Thanks a lot
Im sorry for my stupidity
Keep up this excellent work
Thanks
"Yes, http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v424/n6950/full/nature01799.html
but any article will do the same."
You can select any article on nature.com and it will do the same.
The formatting is wrong because the author's names get lumped together so when you export a citation in APA format, for example, you get something like Thompson, M. D. G. M. for a multi-author paper. In this example the second author's name would be Gordon, M. and subsequent author names are excluded. There are other formatting details that get messed up.