Cite Them Right Harvard - 12th edition
Hi,
The 12th edition of Cite Them Right Harvard has just been published. Two noticeable differences are:
DOI is now displayed as a URL e.g.
Barke, M. and Mowl, G. (2016) ‘Málaga – a failed resort of the early twentieth century?’, Journal of Tourism History (in italics), 2(3), pp. 187–212. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/1755182X.2010.523145
Editors in section/chapter of an edited book are now presented initial, surname e.g.
Karim, R., Tretten, T. and Kumar, U. (2018) ‘eMaintenance’, in M. Pecht and M. Kang (eds) Prognostics and health management of electronics: fundamentals, machine learning, and the internet of things (in italics). Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, pp. 559–587.
I just wondered whether anyone was creating the following two styles to reflect these updates?
Cite Them Right 12th edition - Harvard
Cite Them Right 12th edition - Harvard (no "et al.")
Thanks,
Ruth
The 12th edition of Cite Them Right Harvard has just been published. Two noticeable differences are:
DOI is now displayed as a URL e.g.
Barke, M. and Mowl, G. (2016) ‘Málaga – a failed resort of the early twentieth century?’, Journal of Tourism History (in italics), 2(3), pp. 187–212. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/1755182X.2010.523145
Editors in section/chapter of an edited book are now presented initial, surname e.g.
Karim, R., Tretten, T. and Kumar, U. (2018) ‘eMaintenance’, in M. Pecht and M. Kang (eds) Prognostics and health management of electronics: fundamentals, machine learning, and the internet of things (in italics). Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, pp. 559–587.
I just wondered whether anyone was creating the following two styles to reflect these updates?
Cite Them Right 12th edition - Harvard
Cite Them Right 12th edition - Harvard (no "et al.")
Thanks,
Ruth
Am I right in thinking that you've updated Cite Them Right 11th edition - Harvard (no "et al.") to the 12th edition instead of creating a new style? If this is the case then the style is still called Cite Them Right 11th edition - Harvard (no "et al.") so needs the name changing to Cite Them Right 12th edition - Harvard (no "et al.").
Many thanks,
Ruth
(PR: https://github.com/citation-style-language/styles/pull/6115)
Any chance you could copy the section from the guidelines here to evaluate if it's not mixed up with how websites need to be rendered?
Journal articles
Citation order:
Author (surname followed by initials)
Year of publication (in round brackets)
Title of article (in single quotation marks)
Title of journal (in italics – capitalise first letter of each word in title, except for linking words such as and, of, the, for)
Issue information: volume (unbracketed) and, where applicable, part number, month or season (all in round brackets)
Page reference (if available) or article number
If accessed online:
Available at: DOI or URL (if required) (Accessed: date)
Example:
Barke, M. and Mowl, G. (2016) ‘Málaga – a failed resort of the early twentieth century?’, Journal of Tourism History (in italics), 2(3), pp. 187–212. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/1755182X.2010.523145
p. 55-56:
https://ibb.co/6NVRMDn
https://ibb.co/84wKcYQ