Creating Ante-Nicene Fathers and other unique citations
Greetings all,
I have recently modified the Society of Biblical Literature style for myself because, for example, my institution requires us to do some things slightly differently than SBL 2. Mostly I use a visual editor to make most of my changes and that has worked fine for the time being.
However, there are certain unique citations (e.g. Ante-Nicene Fathers) that I need to cite and I cannot find a way to create a citation type (e.g. book, book section) with the visual editors that I use. I do not have the coding ability to create a type.
Also, I would be too afraid without some sort of help with this. So, essentially, my question is this: Is there a way to create citation types from scratch? And if so, how?
I have recently modified the Society of Biblical Literature style for myself because, for example, my institution requires us to do some things slightly differently than SBL 2. Mostly I use a visual editor to make most of my changes and that has worked fine for the time being.
However, there are certain unique citations (e.g. Ante-Nicene Fathers) that I need to cite and I cannot find a way to create a citation type (e.g. book, book section) with the visual editors that I use. I do not have the coding ability to create a type.
Also, I would be too afraid without some sort of help with this. So, essentially, my question is this: Is there a way to create citation types from scratch? And if so, how?
For example, If I want to quote from Augustine's letters. SBL says it has to be this.
Augustine, Letters of St. Augustine (in italics) 28.3.5 (NPNF1 1:252).
The bibliography should look like this:
Augustine. The Letters of St. Augustine. (italics) In vol. 1 of The Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, (italics) Series 1. Edited by Philip Schaff. 1886–1889. 14 vols. Repr., Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1994.
The problem isn't so much the bibliography, but the footnote. Thoughts?
What is 28.3.5 here? Is 1:252 a locator (section and page, etc.)? If not, what is it?
Is it only this specific book (NPNF) or a whole class of books (e.g., classics generally)?