Citation lets you use tables to include abbreviations for journals and publishers
in your references. If you regularly write articles for journals requiring
abbreviations, you will want to use this feature.
When the option for Journal Abbreviations or Publisher Abbreviations
is checked in your Preferences dialog, Citation uses the journal
abbreviations table for journal names in your citations. It works
on a very simple principle: when a citation for a journal article is
written, Citation looks for a match for the Journal name in the
first column of the journal abbreviations table (jourabs.txt).
When it locates a match, it replaces the full name of the journal
in the record with an abbreviation when the citation is formatted.
Setting Preferences for abbreviations
- With Citation open, choose File, Preferences. The Preferences dialog will display.
- Check the option to use Journal abbreviations and Publisher abbreviations.
- Choose OK to close the Preferences Dialog box.
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The abbreviation tables
Citation installs abbreviation tables for journals (JOURABS.TXT) and
publishers (PUBABS.TXT) in your citation folder as text files that you
can edit with your word processor. When you edit an abbreviation
table, make certain you save it as Plain Text (Word) or Generic
WP document (WordPerfect).
The structure of the abbreviation tables is simple: there are two columns.
The first column is used to match the text in your datafile, and the second
column contains the journal abbreviations to use in your citations.
The two columns are separated by a TAB.
Editing the abbreviation tables
- With your word processor, open the file c:\citation\journabs.txt.
The Journal Abbreviations table will open. The publisher abbreviation
table is pubabs.txt.
Always enter abbreviations in the table with periods; you can set
the options in Preferences for the abbreviation style without periods.
- When you have customized the table for your needs, save the table
as a text file and close the document.
Note: if journal names are currently in your datafile as abbreviations, and
you need to generate citations with the full names of journals, you can
edit the table file so that the first column contains abbreviations, and
the second column contains the full name of the journal.
For text file lists of standard abbreviations for medical journals,
physics, and other disciplines that you can download and use to
customize your own abbreviation tables, visit our web site at
www.citationonline.net.