Bug in Chicago Style?
I'm using the citation style "Chicago Manual of Style 18th edition (notes and bibliography, with classic variants)".
I noticed that when I cite a journal item without a date, the style adds "(forthcoming)" at the end of the citation, rather than omitting the date altogether or inserting something like "n.d." or "n/d." When I switch back to the corresponding 17th edition style, the citation ends with (n/d) as expected.
Is this the intended behavior for the style? If so, how may I avoid it? The work I'm citing is not forthcoming; rather, the publication date is unknown.
I noticed that when I cite a journal item without a date, the style adds "(forthcoming)" at the end of the citation, rather than omitting the date altogether or inserting something like "n.d." or "n/d." When I switch back to the corresponding 17th edition style, the citation ends with (n/d) as expected.
Is this the intended behavior for the style? If so, how may I avoid it? The work I'm citing is not forthcoming; rather, the publication date is unknown.
This behaviour only applies to journal articles, so one solution is to switch the item type to magazine.
I am citing some old (1930s) hobby publications where the date of publication isn't well documented but is a journal. I've found that I can put n/d in the date field as a workaround, though I am not sure I would agree with assuming that undated journals are forthcoming. I suppose Magazine would work also.
issued: 1930?
Otherwise, 'forthcoming' will not appear if there is a page range for the article.
If you don't have a page range (e.g. if you are working from clippings?), those sound like trade magazines rather than journal articles to me, and you won't receive 'forthcoming' with that item type.