adamsmith
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That's not what citations are. You can do whatever you want, of course (it's your paper or thesis), but there is no 'correct' way to cite a company. Anything you come up with is as correct as it can be
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Do you mean Refinitiv (now LSEG) the data provider? Really depends on what you want to cite. If you cite a dataset, cite it as a dataset. You wouldn't cite a company -- that's not a thing.
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It could be handled either way, but handling it via a new form attribute ('short' doesn't seem right here) has no advantage and it so it stays how it was originally introduced to avoid unnecessary changes. It's distinct from title-short and contain…
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IEEE and AMA have locators -- next to the number for in text citations -- explicitly in their style guides and the CSL styles have them.. You occasionally see example of pinpoints in numerical bibliographies in journals. They're the result of concep…
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APA style would be the obvious choice
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We've done shortened subsequent citations since the first Chicago style in CSL/Zotero (16th edition I think). You might just not have citations set to auto-update.
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(To be clear, page-first should not be in the data. It should be -- and is by Zotero -- be generated from the full range in page)
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Zotero doesn't do anything with Footnote spacing; this is entirely a Word issue, see e.g. here for a solution: https://superuser.com/a/1030986
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There are a number of threads on multiple bibliographies -- which are kind of possible but not really -- better to follow up on that question there. I don't know what the plans on this are; it's generally intended to be supported in citeproc-js and …
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Sorry, but we're talking past each other and you're not engaging with what a locator is. It's what legal scholars call a pinpoint used in a citation. It can by definition not be in the bibliography. Doing so would make a mess of the data model. You …
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Purely in terms of the data model, though, this doesn't make sense. Citations to bibliography is a many-to-one relationship and the specifications define the locator as "A cite-specific pinpointer" -- so an item in a bibliography can have any number…
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Also look at the zoplicate add-on which can automate deduplication (though with the caveat that there might be false positives)
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Locators are by definition citation specific. They make no sense in the bibliography.
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If you have your institutional email associated with your Zotero account, Zotero will switch you to the institutional storage subscription (which is not a license -- you'll always use Zotero freely under its open source AGPL license) automatically.
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There's not really documentation -- Zotero is a tool and you're responsible to use it in a way that complies with legal norms wherever you use it. Some practical notes: Technically, Zotero can be used to mass-import data -- that's especially the ca…
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The format of footnote anchors is determined by Word, not Zotero -- just Google something like switch footnotes to Roman numbers (which will also show the reverse for endnotes)
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What do you see after clicking OK or when editing citations? Seems very unlikely that it'd keep prompting you to select a citation style? The behavior here hasn't changed (though note that the red box is not the 'classic' add citation dialog, so if…
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If you just want to copy references, you can use Quick Copy: https://www.zotero.org/support/creating_bibliographies#quick_copy If you actually want them displayed, you can customize the display of a reference at the top right by righ-clicking on it…
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I think that's right -- they're listed alphabetical by author first, which means that single author works are getting listed before multi-author works and Jablonski before Peterson. Chicago Manual (on which ASA is broadly based) covers this in 14.6…
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That looks like a problem with the schema; I think we'll want an issue on that github repo. For some reason, several of the "-number" terms that have terms corresponding to the first part (so "supplement-number", "part-number", and "printing-number"…
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You don't have the author entered consistently; that's why he displays as R. L. in the first citation and as Richard L. in all the others.
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By clicking on the OK button as in any window. (And styles are selected per document, not in the style manager -- obviously you want to be able to have different documents with different citation styles)
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Right -- you'd need to pick a citation style: those are the document preferences, they always open on first citation. Only then you'd get the search bar.
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and you've made sure to set quick search to "All Fields and Tags"? It won't work in author, title, year
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But PubMed Central articles (as at least the first two are) should he in unpaywall so Zotero should grab them via the OA PDF function, no?
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My understanding is that this should work as long as any search works -- can you try with a folder name that you know is in your library? Note that the storage folder does contain files in groups and search doesn't go across groups.
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(I'd very much recommend library catalogs or ISBN search -- which uses catalogs -- over Google Books, which has pretty mediocre book metadata)
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When you're looking at the file, note the folder name https://s3.amazonaws.com/zotero.org/images/forums/u2433/rznwyrnzk8s9qt3psxo6.png BAGFQDIT in this case. Then go to Zotero and in the quick search bar select "All Files and Tags", paste the fold…
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FWIW, you can search by the alphanumeric string of the storage subfolder a file is in, assuming you're using Zotero storage. (I have no view on whether filename searches should be possible, but as long as they're not, this should cover a fair number…
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This covers all the scenarios we're aware of that can unlink citations: https://www.zotero.org/support/kb/existing_citations_not_detected
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