Citation Management and Notes Collection in Markdown
Introduction
This document serves as a guide for managing citations and collecting research notes for our project. We'll use a combination of a .bib
file for bibliographic references and Markdown for note-taking.
Part 1: Setting Up Your .bib File for Citations
Creating a .bib File
- Create a new file with a
.bib
extension, for example,project_references.bib
. - Add bibliographic entries to this file. Each entry should follow the BibTeX format.
Example of a .bib Entry
```bibtex @article{Doe2021, author = {Jane Doe and John Smith}, title = {Insights into Environmental Data Science}, journal = {Journal of Data Science}, year = {2021}, volume = {15}, number = {4}, pages = {123-145}, doi = {10.1000/jds.2021.15.4} }
Part 2: Using Citations in Markdown
Citing in Your Markdown Document
- Refer to works in your
.bib
file using citation keys, like[@Doe2021]
.
Converting Markdown to PDF with Citations
- Use Pandoc:
pandoc yourdoc.md --bibliography=project_references.bib --citeproc -o output.pdf
Part 3: Collecting Citations and Research Notes
Structuring Your Notes
Notes on Doe 2021 [@Doe2021]
- Key Points:
- Summary of the article's main arguments.
-
Notable methodologies.
-
Relevance to Our Project:
- How this research informs our project.
- Applicable methodologies or theories.
Notes on Another Article [@Another2021]
- Key Points:
-
...
-
Relevance to Our Project:
- ...
Conclusion
This document facilitates efficient management of references and collaborative knowledge building for our project.
Last update:
2024-11-21