Battle of Honey Springs

JabRef is an open-source, cross-platform citation and reference management software.[3][4] It is used to collect, organize and search bibliographic information.

JabRef has a target audience of academics and many university libraries have written guides on its usage.[5][6][7] It uses BibTeX and BibLaTeX as its native formats and is therefore typically used for LaTeX.[8] The name JabRef stands for Java, Alver, Batada, Reference. The original version was released on November 29, 2003.[9]

Features

JabRef supports Windows, Linux and Mac OS X, it is available free of charge and is actively developed.

Collection

Organization

  • Supports hierarchical groupings based on keywords, tags, search terms etc.
  • Includes features for searching, filtering and detecting duplicates.
  • Attempts to complete partial bibliographic data by comparing with curated online catalogues such as Google Scholar, Springer or MathSciNet.
  • Citation keys, metadata fields and file renaming rules are customizable.

Interoperability

  • Thousands of citation styles are built-in.
  • Cite-as-you-write functionality for external applications such as Emacs, Kile, LyX, Texmaker, TeXstudio, Vim and WinEdt.
  • Support for Word and LibreOffice/OpenOffice for inserting and formatting citations.
  • Library is saved as a human readable text file.
  • When editing in a group, the library can be synchronized with a SQL database.

Installation

The latest stable release is available at FossHub. For Unix-like operating systems, it is also common for JabRef to be available through the default package manager. Moreover, fresh development builds are available at builds.jabref.org.

See also

References

  1. ^ maintainers file in JabRef repository
  2. ^ "Release 5.13". 1 April 2024. Retrieved 3 April 2024.
  3. ^ "The relationship of code churn and architectural violations in the open source software JabRef | Proceedings of the 11th European Conference on Software Architecture: Companion Proceedings". 2017: 152–158. doi:10.1145/3129790.3129810. S2CID 32372358. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  4. ^ Basak, Sujit Kumar (2014). "Reference Management Software: A Comparative Analysis of JabRef and RefWorks" (PDF). Int'l Conf. On Chemical Engineering & Advanced Computational Technologies.
  5. ^ "BibTex and LaTex: JabRef". Library of University of Saskatchewan. Retrieved 2019-06-06.
  6. ^ "JabRef and LateX". The Library of the Melbourne University. Retrieved 2019-06-06.
  7. ^ Feyer, S.; Siebert, S.; Gipp, B.; Aizawa, A.; Beel, J. (2017). "Integration of the Scientific Recommender System Mr. DLib into the Reference Manager JabRef". In Jose, Joemon M; Hauff, Claudia; Altıngovde, Ismail Sengor; Song, Dawei; Albakour, Dyaa; Watt, Stuart; Tait, John (eds.). Advances in Information Retrieval. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Vol. 10193. Cham: Springer International Publishing. pp. 770–774. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-56608-5_80. ISBN 978-3-319-56608-5.
  8. ^ Beel, Joeran (2013-11-11). "On the popularity of reference managers, and their rise and fall | | Prof. Joeran Beel (TCD Dublin)". Archived from the original on 2020-06-27. Retrieved 2020-03-11.
  9. ^ "History of JabRef". Retrieved 2011-12-30.

External links