Grey shades persist
I am working on a long document (30 pages, 100+ citations) and after having to wait quite long after each citation I inserted, I decided to turn off the automatically update function. After I did that, the grey shading of new citations started. However, after manually updating, those grey shades didn't disappear. Even when turning automatic update back on, they are still there. Also when exporting to pdf. I killed them now by selecting the whole document and turning the highlighting off. However it does frighten, when you keep seeing those!
I do understand the shading's function – as well as the general inflexibility of Google Docs – but it would be wonderful if there could be some way that e.g. (1) this shading feature could be made not to show when printing/downloading to PDF, or (2) the shading feature could be disabled, or (3) rather than the shading, there could just be a warning message you get when trying to download to PDF if a citation refresh is needed (on par with the warning it gives you if you try to download to PDF a file whose references are still linked).
Many thanks for reading, and again I understand if this is not possible, but thought it couldn't hurt to mention. All best wishes!
First, you shouldn't be submitting anything with active Zotero citations — that would, indeed, be unprofessional, which is why you don't do it. You need to make a copy of the document and use the plugin's "Unlink Citations" feature before submitting anything. Note that, in Google Docs, it's not just shading — active Zotero citations in Google Docs are actually links that show a popup if you click on them, because that's how Zotero is able to embed the metadata that enables the integration.
This applies to Zotero and all similar tools, all of which by necessity insert fields or links into documents to enable their special functionality. Otherwise it would just be plain text. Not sure what you mean by this. As you say, there's already a warning if you try to download a PDF from a Google Doc without unlinking citations.
If you're saying you're getting shading even after unlinking citations, then that would be a bug.
At first I thought the shading was indeed there because it marked an active citation link. But it isn't a link, and after much fiddling to try to figure things out, I realized that it was just that the text involved was literally shaded with grey, in terms of pure formatting – which then was fixed when I removed that shading.
And if it's helpful to note, it is showing up on both PDFs created by printing to PDF from the 'Format' menu, as well as PDFs created by downloading to a PDF.
The only way I was able to create a PDF from the unlinked file that does not have this shading was to physically select the citations involved and remove their grey shading.
LG: If the shading doesn't go away when you Refresh, that's the problem, not anything else.
If possible, can you share with support@zotero.org an excerpt of a copy of the document where you have active Zotero citations with shading that doesn't go away when you refresh?
(The shading indeed doesn't go away when I Refresh – but only when I manually remove the shading itself – and you are correct that this is only within Google Docs, not Word.)
Thanks again! (And apologies for any confusion!)