Provided by: pandoc-citeproc_0.15.0.1-1build4_amd64 bug

NAME

       pandoc-citeproc - filter to resolve citations in a pandoc document.

SYNOPSIS

       pandoc-citeproc options [file..]

DESCRIPTION

       The pandoc-citeproc executable has two modes, filter mode and convert mode.

   Filter mode
       Run without options, it acts as a filter that takes a JSON-encoded Pandoc document, formats citations and
       adds a bibliography, and returns a JSON-encoded  pandoc  document.   Citations  will  be  resolved,  and,
       assuming there are bibliography entries, a bibliography will be inserted into a Div element with id refs.
       If no such Div exists, one will be  created  and  appended  to  the  end  of  the  document  (unless  the
       suppress-bibliography  metadata  field  is  set to a true value).  If you wish the bibliography to have a
       section header, put the section header at the end of your document.  (See  the  pandoc_markdown  (5)  man
       page under “Citations” for details on how to encode citations in pandoc’s markdown.)

       To process citations with pandoc, call pandoc-citeproc as a filter:

              pandoc --filter pandoc-citeproc input.md -s -o output.html

       pandoc-citeproc will look for the following metadata fields in the input:

       bibliography
              A  path,  or YAML list of paths, of bibliography files to use.  These may be in any of the formats
              supported by bibutils.

              Format        File extension
              ─────────────────────────────
              BibLaTeX      .bib
              BibTeX        .bibtex
              Copac         .copac
              CSL JSON      .json
              CSL YAML      .yaml
              EndNote       .enl
              EndNote XML   .xml
              ISI           .wos
              MEDLINE       .medline
              MODS          .mods
              NBIB          .nbib
              RIS           .ris

              Note that .bib can generally be used with both BibTeX and BibLaTeX files, but you can use  .bibtex
              to force BibTeX.

       references
              A  YAML  list of references.  Each reference is a YAML object.  The format is essentially CSL JSON
              format.  Here is an example:

                     - id: doe2006
                       author:
                         family: Doe
                         given: [John, F.]
                       title: Article
                       page: 33-34
                       issued:
                         year: 2006
                       type: article-journal
                       volume: 6
                       container-title: Journal of Generic Studies

              The contents of fields will be interpreted as markdown when appropriate: so, for example, emphasis
              and strong emphasis can be used in title fields.  Simple tex math will also be parsed and rendered
              appropriately.

       csl or citation-style
              Path or URL of a CSL style file.  If the file is not found  relative  to  the  working  directory,
              pandoc-citeproc will look in the $HOME/.csl directory (or C:\Users\USERNAME\AppData\Roaming\csl in
              Windows 7).  If this is left off, pandoc-citeproc will look for $HOME/.pandoc/default.csl, and  if
              this  is not present, it will use chicago-author-date.csl, looking first in $HOME/.csl and then in
              its own data files.

       link-citations
              If this has a true value, citations in author-date and numerical styles  will  be  hyperlinked  to
              their corresponding bibliography entries.  The default is not to add hyperlinks.

       citation-abbreviations
              Path  to  a  CSL  abbreviations  JSON  file.   If  the  file  is not found relative to the working
              directory,    pandoc-citeproc    will     look     in     the     $HOME/.csl     directory     (or
              C:\Users\USERNAME\AppData\Roaming\csl   in   Windows   7).    The   format   is   described   here
              (http://citationstylist.org/2011/10/19/abbreviations-for-zotero-test-release).  Abbreviations  are
              only output if, in the .csl file, form="short" is set on the element that renders the variable.

              Here is a short example:

                     { "default": {
                         "container-title": {
                                 "Lloyd's Law Reports": "Lloyd's Rep",
                                 "Estates Gazette": "EG",
                                 "Scots Law Times": "SLT"
                         }
                       }
                     }

       lang   Locale  to  use  in  formatting  citations.   If  this  is  not  set, the locale is taken from the
              default-locale attribute of the CSL file.  en-US is used if a locale is not  specified  in  either
              the  metadata or the CSL file.  (For backwards compatibility, the field locale can be used instead
              of lang, but this lang should be used going forward.)

       suppress-bibliography
              If this has a true value, the bibliography will be left off.  Otherwise  a  bibliography  will  be
              inserted  into each Div element with id refs.  If there is no such Div, one will be created at the
              end of the document.

       reference-section-title
              If this has a value, a section header with this title will be added before the  bibliography.   If
              reference-section-title  is  not specified and the document ends with a section header, this final
              header will be treated as the bibliography header.

       notes-after-punctuation
              If true (the default), pandoc will  put  footnote  citations  after  following  punctuation.   For
              example,  if  the source contains blah blah [@jones99]., the result will look like blah blah.[^1],
              with the note moved after the period and the space collapsed.  If false, the space will  still  be
              collapsed, but the footnote will not be moved after the punctuation.

       The  metadata  must contain either references or bibliography or both as a source of references.  csl and
       citation-abbreviations are optional.  If csl is not provided, a default stylesheet will be  used  (either
       ~/.pandoc/default.csl or a version of chicago-author-date.csl).

   Convert mode
       If  the  option --bib2yaml or --bib2json is used, pandoc-citeproc will not process citations; instead, it
       will treat its input (from stdin or files) as a bibliography and convert  it  either  to  a  pandoc  YAML
       metadata  section,  suitable  for  inclusion  in  a  pandoc  document  (--bib2yaml),  or  as  a  CSL JSON
       bibliography, suitable for import to zotero (--bib2json).

       The --format option can be used  to  specify  the  bibliography  format,  though  when  files  are  used,
       pandoc-citeproc can generally guess this from the extension.

       This mode supersedes the old biblio2yaml program.

   Raw content (pandoc-citeproc only)
       To  include  raw  content in a prefix, suffix, delimiter, or term, surround it with these tags indicating
       the format:

              {{jats}}<ref>{{/jats}}

       Without the tags, the string will be interpreted as a string and escaped in the output, rather than being
       passed through raw.

       This  feature  allows stylesheets to be customized to give different output for different output formats.
       However, stylesheets customized in this way will not be useable by other CSL implementations.

OPTIONS

       -y, --bib2yaml
              Convert bibliography to YAML suitable for inclusion in pandoc metadata.

       -j, --bib2json
              Convert bibliography to CSL JSON suitable for import into Zotero.

       -f FORMAT, --format=FORMAT
              Specify format of bibliography to be converted.  Legal values are biblatex, bibtex, ris,  endnote,
              endnotexml, isi, medline, copac, mods, nbib, and json.

       -h, --help
              Print usage information.

       --man  Print  the  man  page  in  groff man format.  To get a plain text version, pandoc-citeproc --man |
              groff -mman -Tutf8.  To pandoc-citeproc --man | groff -mman -Thtml.

       --license
              Print the license.

       -q, --quiet
              Silence all warnings.

       -V, --version
              Print version.

NOTES

   General
       If you use a biblatex database, closely follow the specifications in the “Database Guide” section of  the
       biblatex manual (currently 2.8a).

       If  you  use  a  CSL-YAML or CSL-JSON database, or a CSL-YAML metadata section in your markdown document,
       follow      the      “Citation       Style       Language       1.0.1       Language       Specification”
       (<http://citationstyles.org/downloads/specification.html>).         Particularly       relevant       are
       <http://citationstyles.org/downloads/specification.html#appendix-iii-types> (which  neither  comments  on
       usage         nor         specifies         required        and        optional        fields)        and
       <http://citationstyles.org/downloads/specification.html#appendix-iv-variables>   (which   does    contain
       comments).

   Titles: Title vs. Sentence Case
       If you are using a bibtex or biblatex bibliography, then observe the following rules:

       • English  titles should be in title case.  Non-English titles should be in sentence case, and the langid
         field in biblatex should be set to the  relevant  language.   (The  following  values  are  treated  as
         English: american, british, canadian, english, australian, newzealand, USenglish, or UKenglish.)

       • As  is  standard  with bibtex/biblatex, proper names should be protected with curly braces so that they
         won’t be lowercased in styles that call for sentence case.  For example:

                title = {My Dinner with {Andre}}

       • In addition, words that should remain lowercase (or camelCase) should be protected:

                title = {Spin Wave Dispersion on the {nm} Scale}

         Though this is not necessary in bibtex/biblatex, it is necessary with  citeproc,  which  stores  titles
         internally  in  sentence  case,  and converts to title case in styles that require it.  Here we protect
         “nm” so that it doesn’t get converted to “Nm” at this stage.

       If you are using a CSL bibliography (either JSON or YAML), then observe the following rules:

       • All titles should be in sentence case.

       • Use the language field for non-English titles to prevent their conversion to title case in styles  that
         call for this.  (Conversion happens only if language begins with en or is left empty.)

       • Protect words that should not be converted to title case using this syntax:

                Spin wave dispersion on the <span class="nocase">nm</span> scale

   Conference Papers, Published vs. Unpublished
       For  a  formally  published  conference  paper,  use the biblatex entry type inproceedings (which will be
       mapped to CSL paper-conference).

       For an unpublished manuscript, use the biblatex entry type unpublished without an eventtitle field  (this
       entry type will be mapped to CSL manuscript).

       For  a  talk,  an  unpublished  conference  paper,  or a poster presentation, use the biblatex entry type
       unpublished with an eventtitle field (this entry type will be mapped to CSL speech).   Use  the  biblatex
       type  field  to  indicate  the  type,  e.g. “Paper”, or “Poster”.  venue and eventdate may be useful too,
       though eventdate will not be rendered by most CSL styles.  Note that venue  is  for  the  event’s  venue,
       unlike  location  which  describes  the  publisher’s  location;  do not use the latter for an unpublished
       conference paper.

AUTHORS

       Andrea Rossato and John MacFarlane.

SEE ALSO

       pandoc (1), pandoc_markdown (5).

       The   pandoc-citeproc    source    code    and    all    documentation    may    be    downloaded    from
       <http://github.com/jgm/pandoc-citeproc/>.