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Chris Fung

dfalster/RZotero - 0 views

shared by Chris Fung on 04 Nov 14 - No Cached
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    "RZotero This is a set or routines for interacting with my Zotero library. I love Zotero, but it lacks some key features. Hence I was interested to see if these could achieve some of the things I was after in R. Note, this material is in development and not currently working, so I do not recommend using it, at this stage. My Zotero Wish List Here are some of the features I would like: Find and replace function Ability to automatically clean journal names, according to a list of journal name substitutions Ability to modify the author list Ability to retrieve missing abstracts based on DOI Ability to find missing DOIs Ability to delete many (all) tags (i had hundreds) Ability to analyse data from my library in R. The best thing about Zotero is that it's open source and free. The software is maintained by a community of developers who give their time for free, and are actively working on improving it. However, there is also limited resources and a long queue of feature requests: @adaptive_plant @_inundata one thing @zotero does not lack is requests for features... much more helpful would be patches to 100+ tickets - adam.smith (@adam42smith) April 20, 2013 Accessing Zotero via the Sql database The best way of interacting with your Zotero library is to write some code which connects to Zotero's server or Javascript API. Unfortunately I don't have the requisite skills to do this. Another option is to access Zotero the local copy of Zotero's sqlite database. That is the approach I have taken here. Working with the sql database is fine for read-only actions. Writing to the sql database is not recommended as any updates may not be passed on to server, meaning you have to reset the server data to get the update processed. To get started, I followed the example code here , which uses the "RSQLite" package. Database structure The database structure is described here. An easy way to familiairse yourself with the structure is to download sqlitebrowser and poke aro
Josh Paluch

Zotero Forums - Use of zotero with delicious, diigo, etc. - 0 views

  • how about using a tag to trigger a sync:in diigo:add the tag "zotero" - you can then manually (?automatically) ask zotero to check whether it has already added "zotero" tagged items. It can also pull down comments into zotero notes, sync the other tags, and add a link back to the diigo page.in zotero:add the tag "diigo" This would cause a new diigo bookmark to be created, including addition of annotations from zotero notes.the difficulty would be in keeping track of which note in zotero corresponds to which annotation. A one-off copy would not be very good. Maybe include a unique code with each note (ugly), or use a fuzzy match so updated annotations are recognized, providing they have at least a few words in common.
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    Does this approach make sense to anyone? I'm trying to imagine hoe Diigo and Zotero can compliment each other.
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    Do Diigo and Zotero play nice?
Terry Elliott

12 must know Zotero tips and techniques - The Ideophone - 0 views

  • drag the link from the page onto the reference in your library. Zotero stores and attaches the PDF for you.
    • Terry Elliott
       
      A feature that I had read about, but not used. Very handy especially with pdf so predominant in Google Scholar.
  • Zotero can index your PDF attachments and make them fully searchable, turning your library from a mere linked catalogue into a Google Books of sorts.
  • Want to tag multiple items at once? Select them, make sure the tag selector is visible in the left pane, and drag them onto the tag you want to use. The tag will be applied to all items.
  • ...1 more annotation...
    • Terry Elliott
       
      I especially like this because I have many full-text sources via my university databases. Very cool.
Terry Elliott

gallimaufry.ws - 0 views

shared by Terry Elliott on 07 Dec 08 - Cached
  • EasyBib: a basic bibliography/citation maker. Works through an on-line interface to build a reference list, which you can then export to MS Word or another word processing programme in RTF. If you register, you can save multiple reference lists online and share them with other users and such. I didn’t register (even though it’s free), so I can’t vouch for whether or not this works well. Major drawback is that it only builds bibliographies in MLA style. A cool feature is if you’re citing a book and you have the ISBN, EasyBib can automatically populate the reference fields for you.
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    A useful listing of other research tools.
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