Sources for Bibtex entries - MathOverflow most recent 30 from http://mathoverflow.net 2013-05-22T03:12:40Z http://mathoverflow.net/feeds/question/20551 http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdf http://mathoverflow.net/questions/20551/sources-for-bibtex-entries Sources for Bibtex entries Charles Staats 2010-04-06T21:42:10Z 2012-05-07T18:55:31Z <p>Does anyone know of a good place to find already-done bibtex entries for standard books in advanced math? Or is this impossible because the citation should include items specific to your copy? (I am seeing the latter as potentially problematic because the only date I can find in my copy of Hartshorne is 2006, whereas the citations I can find all put the publication date at 1977.)</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/20551/sources-for-bibtex-entries/20552#20552 Answer by Andy Putman for Sources for Bibtex entries Andy Putman 2010-04-06T21:44:27Z 2010-04-06T21:56:41Z <p>I recommend using the AMS website MREF, located <a href="http://www.ams.org/mref/" rel="nofollow">here</a>.</p> <p>EDIT : Another remark about your question. Don't worry too much about getting things like the printing date for a book correct (it changes every time they make a new printing run). Just make sure that you have the author, title, and edition in some standard format (and for papers, the journal, date, and page number). Every journal will reformat things into their house style and verify that your bibliographic entries are correct. Make those copy-editors work for their money!</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/20551/sources-for-bibtex-entries/20555#20555 Answer by John Palmieri for Sources for Bibtex entries John Palmieri 2010-04-06T22:14:50Z 2010-04-06T22:14:50Z <p>About 10 years ago I wrote a perl script called "bibweb" which uses <a href="http://www.ams.org/mathscinet/index.html" rel="nofollow">MathSciNet</a> to produce bibtex entries for references. If you have access to MathSciNet and you run</p> <pre><code>bibweb -c 'hartshorne;algebraic-geometry' </code></pre> <p>then one of its answers is</p> <pre><code>@book {MR0463157, AUTHOR = {Hartshorne, Robin}, TITLE = {Algebraic geometry}, NOTE = {Graduate Texts in Mathematics, No. 52}, PUBLISHER = {Springer-Verlag}, ADDRESS = {New York}, YEAR = {1977}, PAGES = {xvi+496}, ISBN = {0-387-90244-9}, MRCLASS = {14-01}, MRNUMBER = {MR0463157 (57 \#3116)}, MRREVIEWER = {Robert Speiser}, } </code></pre> <p>It's not perfect, but it works for me. Download it at <a href="http://www.math.washington.edu/~palmieri/bibweb.php" rel="nofollow">http://www.math.washington.edu/~palmieri/bibweb.php</a>. It's free, so satisfaction guaranteed or double your money back.</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/20551/sources-for-bibtex-entries/20565#20565 Answer by Mikael Vejdemo-Johansson for Sources for Bibtex entries Mikael Vejdemo-Johansson 2010-04-06T23:51:18Z 2010-04-06T23:51:18Z <p>Google Scholar will produce BibTeX entries if you turn on <em>Show links to import to BibTeX</em> in Scholar search preferences.</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/20551/sources-for-bibtex-entries/20577#20577 Answer by lhf for Sources for Bibtex entries lhf 2010-04-07T01:16:49Z 2010-04-07T01:16:49Z <p><a href="http://www.ams.org/mrlookup" rel="nofollow">MR Lookup</a> is also a good tool and seems to be free.</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/20551/sources-for-bibtex-entries/20582#20582 Answer by akopyan for Sources for Bibtex entries akopyan 2010-04-07T02:02:29Z 2010-04-07T02:02:29Z <p>Another way is to use google with option "filetype:bib". Something like <a href="http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&amp;q=Kolmogorov+Arnold+filetype%3abib&amp;aq=f&amp;aqi=&amp;aql=&amp;oq=&amp;gs_rfai=" rel="nofollow">this</a>.</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/20551/sources-for-bibtex-entries/20583#20583 Answer by VA for Sources for Bibtex entries VA 2010-04-07T02:21:28Z 2010-04-07T02:21:28Z <p>The best thing about using MathSciNet for bibtex entries is that it is <em>standard</em> and <em>universally accepted</em>. No need to reinvent a bicycle.</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/20551/sources-for-bibtex-entries/20585#20585 Answer by Jason Polak for Sources for Bibtex entries Jason Polak 2010-04-07T02:51:06Z 2010-04-07T02:51:06Z <p>There's also <a href="http://lead.to/amazon/en/" rel="nofollow">Lead2Amazon</a> which can export in a variety of formats.</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/20551/sources-for-bibtex-entries/20620#20620 Answer by Timo Schürg for Sources for Bibtex entries Timo Schürg 2010-04-07T11:19:53Z 2010-04-07T11:19:53Z <p>Zotero is a nice plug-in for firefox that produces a database of your favorite publications. Every time you are on a website like arxiv, math-sci net or the homepage of some journal, it offers you to save the publication into your database. It gathers all the relevant information automatically from the page, and it does that amazingly well. Once you've got all your publications in your database, just hit the export to bibtex button and you're done. </p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/20551/sources-for-bibtex-entries/20627#20627 Answer by Andreas Holmstrom for Sources for Bibtex entries Andreas Holmstrom 2010-04-07T13:40:12Z 2010-04-07T13:40:12Z <p>The Courant Centre has a <a href="http://www.crcg.de/arXivToBibTeX/" rel="nofollow">useful webpage</a> which produces nice BibTeX entries for arXiv preprints, if you input a paper ID or an author ID.</p> <p>Random fact: The <a href="http://www.math.uiuc.edu/K-theory/" rel="nofollow">K-theory archive</a> has a loooong BibTeX file on the K-theory literature available for download.</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/20551/sources-for-bibtex-entries/20632#20632 Answer by Alejandro for Sources for Bibtex entries Alejandro 2010-04-07T14:31:14Z 2010-04-07T14:31:14Z <p>Try <a href="http://www.ottobib.com/" rel="nofollow">http://www.ottobib.com/</a>. It is a ISBN to Bibtex (or other formats) converter.</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/20551/sources-for-bibtex-entries/20661#20661 Answer by Leah Wrenn Berman for Sources for Bibtex entries Leah Wrenn Berman 2010-04-07T21:14:07Z 2010-04-07T21:14:07Z <p>If you use a mac, <a href="http://bibdesk.sourceforge.net/" rel="nofollow">BibDesk</a> is fantastic: among other really nice features, it lets you find your book/article/etc on your choice of free sites (ACM, arXiv, CiteULike, Google Scholar, HubMed, SPIRES) or subscription sites (IEEE Xplore, MathSciNet, Project Euclid, Zentralblatt Math) and then once you've found the item, it takes one click to import the citation into the database. The database can also store electronic copies of articles (if available) referenced to the citation.</p> <p>So for example, I would open BibDesk, click on the icon that says Web, click on "MathSciNet". Within the program I see the MathSciNet page (assuming I'm at work where I have access). Type in the search terms Hartshorne and Geometry, and up comes 8 citations I could import. One of them is <em>Algebraic Geometry</em> from 1977, so I would click on the button that says "import". BibDesk does all the other work.</p> <p>While writing a paper, just drag and drop the citations onto your LaTeX document to embed \cite{blah} with the appropriate cite key (at least if you're using TeXShop).</p> <p>When you're ready to stick a bibliography into your paper, select the relevant articles in the BibDesk database and export them into a BibTeX file. It's super easy.</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/20551/sources-for-bibtex-entries/22827#22827 Answer by Jeromy Anglim for Sources for Bibtex entries Jeromy Anglim 2010-04-28T09:01:49Z 2010-04-28T09:01:49Z <p>I wrote a script using AutoHotKey that allows me to highlight the title of a reference (e.g., in a PDF article). It then looks up Google Scholar based on that title using Google Scholar's "allintitle:" key word. I have Google Scholar set to export BibTeX. I can then easily drag and drop the BibTeX into JabRef. I posted the details on my blog: <a href="http://jeromyanglim.blogspot.com/2010/04/how-to-get-quick-access-to-full-text.html" rel="nofollow">http://jeromyanglim.blogspot.com/2010/04/how-to-get-quick-access-to-full-text.html</a></p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/20551/sources-for-bibtex-entries/24240#24240 Answer by Olivier for Sources for Bibtex entries Olivier 2010-05-11T13:32:28Z 2010-05-11T13:32:28Z <p>I prefer the <a href="http://www.zentralblatt-math.org" rel="nofollow">Zentralblatt database</a> because it provides bibtex entries with <a href="http://www.doi.org/" rel="nofollow">DOIs</a>.</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/20551/sources-for-bibtex-entries/94061#94061 Answer by Ambrus Weisz for Sources for Bibtex entries Ambrus Weisz 2012-04-14T20:53:31Z 2012-04-14T20:53:31Z <p>Hi, i have had problems with this earlier, and i agree vidh Olivier, that Zentralblatt's database is pretty good, i've even created a simple program wich loads them easily to JabRef or any BibTex files. It works properly, try it out if you are interested. You can find it at <a href="https://sites.google.com/site/jabrefzentralblatt" rel="nofollow">https://sites.google.com/site/jabrefzentralblatt</a>. No install or anything needed. Regards, A.</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/20551/sources-for-bibtex-entries/96212#96212 Answer by kassandra for Sources for Bibtex entries kassandra 2012-05-07T13:07:00Z 2012-05-07T13:31:33Z <p>I also use JabRef. In addition, there is an easy to use JabRef plugin for the <a href="http://gso.gbv.de/DB=2.1/" rel="nofollow">Union Catalogue (GVK)</a> of several German federal states participating in the so-called Common Library Network (GBV).</p> <p>For JabRef see <a href="http://jabref.sourceforge.net/" rel="nofollow">http://jabref.sourceforge.net/</a>.</p> <p>For downloading the JabRef-GBV-plugin see <a href="http://jabref.tempelb.de/" rel="nofollow">http://jabref.tempelb.de/</a>.</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/20551/sources-for-bibtex-entries/96237#96237 Answer by Emilio Pisanty for Sources for Bibtex entries Emilio Pisanty 2012-05-07T16:47:55Z 2012-05-07T16:47:55Z <p>Since it's not been mentioned, I'll chime in with <a href="http://www.mendeley.com/" rel="nofollow">Mendeley</a>, which provides BibTeX citations for papers on the site (minus the linebreaks, unfortunately). They also have a freeware reference manager.</p>