![]() ![]() The definitions syntax is a bit daunting, but this way you avoid “catching too much”, and also you avoid any reset caused by refreshing the citations. Click toolbar icons B to disable bolding and I to enable italic.Įdit the citation style definition to suit your needs.Expand Options and click the Format … button.Select menu item Edit - Find and replace ….Such style should be editable in your document, and hopefully not reset when you update citations/bibliography. If Zotero now (or some time) employs named styles, this is the wrong way to go about it. Note that this catches all directly formatted bold text, so it may alter more than you want. Quick-and-dirty: Find all bold text and alter formatting to italic/unbold.Ĭlean but involved: Edit the chosen citation style (or better, create a new one by copying the currently used citation style) to apply formatting as desired. Zotero’s styling is applied by way of direct formatting (which specifically mentions). See Zotero citation styles for more info. ![]() The formatting Zotero employs to citations/bibliography is an inherent component of the chosen citation style. Conflicting LO/Java/Zotero “bitness” which does not resolve easily, so the Zotero part is only from memory. Based on memories from that (Unable to test right now. I did some work towards Zotero/Writer and citation styles in the past (years ago). … mostly elaborating on what already said in the comments …
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |