Skip to content
New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

Implement ISO 690 citations and references: A.5 Running notes system #162

Open
ronaldtse opened this issue Dec 2, 2019 · 1 comment
Open
Assignees
Labels
enhancement New feature or request

Comments

@ronaldtse
Copy link
Contributor

A.5 Running notes

A.5.1 Citation in text

For running notes, numerals in the text, in parentheses, brackets or superscript, refer to notes, numbered in the order they occur in the text. The notes may contain references to cited information resources. Multiple citations of one information resource should be given separate note numbers.

EXAMPLE 1 The notion of an invisible college has been explored in the sciences32. Its absence among historians is noted by Stieg33. It may be, as Burchard34 points out, that they have no assistants, or are reluctant to delegate35.

EXAMPLE 2 The notion of an invisible college has been explored in the sciences (32). Its absence among historians is noted by Stieg (33). It may be, as Burchard (34) points out, that they have no assistants, or are reluctant to delegate (35).
One note number should be used for each statement or group of statements supported by a citation; the corresponding note may include more than one source (see note 35 in A.5.2.2, Example).

A.5.2 References

A.5.2.1 General

Notes should be presented in numerical order.
A note that refers to an information resource cited in an earlier note should either repeat the full reference or give the number of the earlier note, with necessary page numbers, etc.
If names are abbreviated, the first note (note 1) should explain all such abbreviations or state where the explanations may be found.

A.5.2.2 Example reference list with running notes

EXAMPLE …

  1. The abbreviations used are:
    — CRUS = Centre for Research on User Studies
    — UGC = University Grants Committee
  2. BURCHARD, J.E. How humanists use a library. In: C. F. J. OVERHAGE and J. R. HARMAN (eds.). Intrex: Report on a planning conference and information transfer experiments. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 3 Sept. 1965, pp. 41–87.
  3. STIEG, M. F. The information needs of historians. College and Research Libraries, 1981, 42(6), 549–560.
  4. CRANE, D. Invisible colleges. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1972.
  5. STIEG, ref. 15, p. 556.
  6. BURCHARD, ref. 8.
  7. SMITH, C. Problems of information studies in history. In: S. STONE (ed.), Humanities information research. Sheffield: CRUS, 1980, pp. 27–30.
  8. CHAPMAN, J. Report to the British Library Research and Development Department [microfiche]. Birmingham: University School of History, 1981. S1/9/281.
@opoudjis opoudjis transferred this issue from metanorma/metanorma-standoc Dec 10, 2019
@opoudjis opoudjis self-assigned this Jan 6, 2020
@opoudjis opoudjis added the enhancement New feature or request label Jan 6, 2020
@opoudjis
Copy link
Contributor

Not implemented for any flavour.

Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment
Labels
enhancement New feature or request
Projects
Status: 🏝 Low priority
Development

No branches or pull requests

2 participants