On 01-Apr-05 Peter Schaffter wrote: > On Fri, Apr 01, 2005, Jorgen Grahn wrote: >> On Thu Mar 31 23:22:08 2005, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: >> > Hi. >> > >> > I've begun work on adding refer capabilities to mom. >> > Using the ms refer module as a starting point, I'm >> > setting mom up to use MLA bibliographic rules. >> >> MLA seems to be "Modern Language Association". What kind >> of status (official or unofficial) does this style have? >> I have never heard about it or seen it used. > > As far as I'm aware, there exists no overarchingly official > bibliographic style. Numerous institutions and organizations > have developed their own. Their status is "official" only > within their respective fields. What works best in a medical > text may not be appropriate to a dissertation on Shakespeare. > > In contemporary North American bibliographies, about five > styles are "standard", though by no means the only ones used: > > AMA (American Medical Association) > APA (American Psychological Association) > MLA (Modern Language Association) > Turabian (from Kate Turabian's _A Manual for Writers of Term > Papers, > Theses, and Dissertations_) > Chicago (The Chicago Manual of Style) > > The Modern Language Association has been around for well over a > century, which gives their dicta concerning style considerable > clout, though, as with other styles, no official standing. > > It's a nice style: neat, clean and flexible. I have some quibbles > with it, as I do with other styles, but as a "general" style, it's > by far the one I prefer.
I understand that the MLA style is the general "norm" for publications in the Humanities, to the extent that many Humanities journals either strongly recommend it or insist on it. To your above list you could also add, for instance, the AMA (American Mathematical Association) style, used in JAMA. There are so many! One of the principal merits of specialised bibliography programs is that they can be configured (using a syntax-like "style file") to adhere to a specified standard. This is one reason I've never much liked using {g|t}roffs "refer". While it has the feature that you can set up a database using standard tags, and refer to items in this in various natural ways in your text, it is distinctly inflexible when it comes to changing style. This is not helped by the fact that the implementation of the formatting is done by specialised macros in whatever macro package you happen to be using. See for instance "module ref, Refer support" in s.tmac. In the past I've had to rewrite this stuff to make it adapt to a different style! In the end I switched to a different approach, based on Tim Budd's 'bib' program, a preprocessor for troff, which you can configure using "style files". But this seems to have disappeared from public view since some time ago. Best wishes, Ted. -------------------------------------------------------------------- E-Mail: (Ted Harding) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Fax-to-email: +44 (0)870 094 0861 Date: 01-Apr-05 Time: 23:42:13 ------------------------------ XFMail ------------------------------ _______________________________________________ Groff mailing list Groff@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/groff