New (?) MLA error
I haven't used MLA in a bit, I have found a couple of errors introduced since I used it last.
1. Journal: Extra space between year and semicolon:
Ramírez-Pimienta, J. C. “Picaresca mexicana:‘ El Periquillo Sarniento’ en el tejido mental de la nación.” Revista Hispánica Moderna 51.2 (1998) : 225–235. Print.
Should be: Ramírez-Pimienta, J. C. “Picaresca mexicana:‘ El Periquillo Sarniento’ en el tejido mental de la nación.” Revista Hispánica Moderna 51.2 (1998): 225–235. Print.
2. Capitalization: It looks like something fancy was added--titles no longer are rendered as entered. In English, it seems that the correct exceptions have been set up, but Spanish and German titles I've entered come out differently in the bib than the way I entered them (all words capitalized, for example, in Spanish, when generally only the first word and proper names are capitalized).
1. Journal: Extra space between year and semicolon:
Ramírez-Pimienta, J. C. “Picaresca mexicana:‘ El Periquillo Sarniento’ en el tejido mental de la nación.” Revista Hispánica Moderna 51.2 (1998) : 225–235. Print.
Should be: Ramírez-Pimienta, J. C. “Picaresca mexicana:‘ El Periquillo Sarniento’ en el tejido mental de la nación.” Revista Hispánica Moderna 51.2 (1998): 225–235. Print.
2. Capitalization: It looks like something fancy was added--titles no longer are rendered as entered. In English, it seems that the correct exceptions have been set up, but Spanish and German titles I've entered come out differently in the bib than the way I entered them (all words capitalized, for example, in Spanish, when generally only the first word and proper names are capitalized).
Adorno, Theodor W. Minima Moralia: Reflections from Damaged Life. London: Verso, 1997. Print.
---. Minima Moralia: Reflexionen Aus Dem Beschädigten Leben. Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp, 1951. Print.
I've also noticed that this affects journal titles as well: "PMLA" (the way I entered it) is rendered as "Pmla."
2. Is exactly what you say it is - titles are automatically title-cased in English (as per MLA requirements) but that's not working correctly in other languages: Frank, any idea on how to deal with that both short and medium term?
Edit: Oh my - I can't believe I actually wrote the macro causing 1 - this is so convoluted it'll take me a little time to figure out, but I can roughly see why it happens. I think the new csl processor might be slightly less generous with the garbage input it's getting there, leading to the extra space...
Minima Moralia: Reflexionen aus dem beschädigten Leben
The most certain way to avoid extraneous spaces is to be strict about never starting a prefix or ending a suffix with a space, and placing all joining spaces in delimiter attributes instead. In a style coded in that way, extraneous spaces can never arise.
at least in German, no, there is no such thing as title case.
And I figure your last comment is for me not for samuelas - s/he didn't code nor change the style. I'm of course aware of this, but did this one a while ago. Also I think this isn't actually due to spaces in affixes, but to a super-messy combination of delimiters.
Capitalization is more complicated - when I get a chance I'll post a workaround for the period until this is fixed which will allow people to modify the style so that it doesn't alter capitalization from the title field(s).
(short form: remove all instance of text-case="title"
http://www.zotero.org/support/dev/citation_styles/style_editing_step-by-step )
this means you'll have to use the language field of non-English items.