BibItNow! by Langenscheiss
Instantly creates a Bibtex, RIS, Endnote, APA, MLA or (B)Arnold S. or any user-defined bibliography item, or a user-defined link from abstract pages of scientific journal articles, books and theses, or from news pages and generic websites!
You'll need Firefox to use this extension
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About this extension
NEW FEATURE 0.901: PDF Fallback mode. If any citable item is viewed as a pdf, BibItNow! cannot obtain citation data reliably. On enabled websites of major publishers, it now offers the user the option to instead load the corresponding abstract page. In some rare circumstances, it can even load the abstract page in the background and automatically obtain citation data from the abstract page instead. The pdf fallback mode and/or automatic preloading in the background can be disabled under Global options.
NOTE: The "autofocus" option does not work all the time due to a bug in Firefox. If the citation text is not highlighted upon opening the extension popup, click on the popup once and the text will be highlighted automatically. This auto highlight is only performed if the first attempt to highlight the text fails. Further clicks on the popup will not result in the citation text being highlighted.
DESCRIPTION
So what!? Why should I care about "BibItNow!" ?
Well, probably most scientists know the following situation: you are looking up a nice article that you want to cite, but you somehow run into troubles getting the bibliographic data from your browser into your citation library. It is often already hard to find the "export" button, but even if you have found it, chances are that it does not work if you use a script blocker to avoid the bazillions of unnecessary scripts that are let loose at you nowadays. And even if the export button works, the result is often useless, as it comes in an inconvenient format or contains special characters that are not compatible with your particular bibliography system of choice.
Bibliographic tools which are directly coupled to the browser, such as the popular tool Zotero, have already simplified this task a lot. However, the workflow of these tools is mostly optimized towards their own integrated library system, whereas many users might prefer different library tools while only caring about the citation data extraction capabilities. This plugin offers exactly that, a lightweight tool that focuses solely on extracting citation data as quickly and as correctly as possible. Click the extension's tool bar icon or press the browser action shortcut keys when surfing on the abstract page of a journal article, a book, a thesis, or on any other web page, and the extension will try everything to extract all the data you want. In the format you like, with the encoding it needs! Decide whether you want to simply copy to clipboard, download a file or open it with the program of YOUR CHOICE!
Not happy? You can also contribute by visiting my github:
https://github.com/Langenscheiss/bibitnow
Main Features
- Versatility: Generates bibliography items of journal articles, books, theses and generic web pages in the Bibtex, RIS, Endnote, APA, MLA, (B)Arnold S. or any user-defined format.
- Quick workflow: No more need to mess with the publisher's export button! One click or key stroke to extract the data and either show it in the popup (DEFAULT: ALT+C) , automatically copy it to clipboard (DEFAULT: Alt+W), or to download it as file (DEFAULT: ALT+Q). In the popup, a second click or key stroke lets you copy the data, open a redirection link or download/open the citation with your favorite library software. The extension furthermore comes with a set of options purely aimed at improving your workflow. For example, the plugin automatically generates a clickable and easily copyable DOI link if a DOI is found, or any other used defined link based on the available citation data (e.g., search author on google). The plugin can also be configured to automatically highlight the citation text, enabling completely mouseless operation.
- Simplicity: The plugin only extracts, formats and exports bibliographic data, and its functions are only aimed at avoiding the most common nuisances in these three steps. No fancy library system included!
- Compatibility: An extensively tested set of fixed extraction and parsing rules combined with URL specific adjustments allows the plugin to work on abstract pages of many publishers, including Nature, Science, Elsevier, Springer and any publisher that cares to provide commonly formatted meta data. The extension furthermore works on journal article pages of the scientific databases PubMed and Scopus, and of the open access library arXiv. You can also cite books from various sources, such as Google books or the book section of Amazon, and news articles from any news website providing json linked data in the schema.org format.
- Modifiability: Each citation format comes with a number of easily reachable and adjustable settings. Moreover, for the advanced user/contributor, the flexible data extraction and parsing system allows to easily add or improve the support for specific web pages. Add custom search queries via CSS selectors, and preprocess the extracted data. All in simple, URL-specific Javascript code.
- Optimized for Bibtex: Decide which bibliography field and how many authors to include, customize the bibkey, set whether to abbreviate the journal title and how to include URLs,. Special characters are automatically replaced by the corresponding Latex command, the format of names and initials is standardized, and math mode commands/formulas are preserved!
Credits/References
- XML formatted journal abbreviations are originally cited from the archive of the Woodward Library at the University Of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada,
http://woodward.library.ubc.ca/research-help/journal-abbreviations/
from the JabRef list available here,
https://github.com/JabRef/abbrv.jabref.org/tree/master/journals
and from the list provided by "The Theta Foundation",
https://www.theta.ro/jot/res/serials_list/annser_A.html
- Publisher address information has been obtained and adapted from several sources.
1.) University of Leicester Publisher List:
https://www2.le.ac.uk/offices/english-association/yw/publishers
2.) Deutscher Bildungsserver:
https://www.bildungsserver.de/institutionen_de.html?Katego=11&Name=&Ort=&Land=0&Staat=0&Schlagwort=&suchen=finden
3.) Wiki publisher lists:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_English-language_book_publishing_companies
https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liste_deutschsprachiger_Verlage
- All latex commands for character replacements are cited from the XML Entity Definitions for Characters (3rd Edition) published by the W3C Math Working Group.
https://www.w3.org/2003/entities/2007doc/
- All non-numerical HTML entities are replaced using a lookup tabled cited from the Character Entity Reference Chart published by the W3C HTML Working Group.
https://dev.w3.org/html5/html-author/charref
- A list of unicode identities of all letter characters in all languages
is cited from the XRegExp library source:
http://xregexp.com/
- The extension popup uses the CSS style reset kindly provided by Meyerweb.
http://meyerweb.com/eric/tools/css/reset/
- UTF16 (non-BMP) characters are read using a function kindly provided by the Mozilla Developer Network.
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/String/charCodeAt
NOTE: The "autofocus" option does not work all the time due to a bug in Firefox. If the citation text is not highlighted upon opening the extension popup, click on the popup once and the text will be highlighted automatically. This auto highlight is only performed if the first attempt to highlight the text fails. Further clicks on the popup will not result in the citation text being highlighted.
DESCRIPTION
So what!? Why should I care about "BibItNow!" ?
Well, probably most scientists know the following situation: you are looking up a nice article that you want to cite, but you somehow run into troubles getting the bibliographic data from your browser into your citation library. It is often already hard to find the "export" button, but even if you have found it, chances are that it does not work if you use a script blocker to avoid the bazillions of unnecessary scripts that are let loose at you nowadays. And even if the export button works, the result is often useless, as it comes in an inconvenient format or contains special characters that are not compatible with your particular bibliography system of choice.
Bibliographic tools which are directly coupled to the browser, such as the popular tool Zotero, have already simplified this task a lot. However, the workflow of these tools is mostly optimized towards their own integrated library system, whereas many users might prefer different library tools while only caring about the citation data extraction capabilities. This plugin offers exactly that, a lightweight tool that focuses solely on extracting citation data as quickly and as correctly as possible. Click the extension's tool bar icon or press the browser action shortcut keys when surfing on the abstract page of a journal article, a book, a thesis, or on any other web page, and the extension will try everything to extract all the data you want. In the format you like, with the encoding it needs! Decide whether you want to simply copy to clipboard, download a file or open it with the program of YOUR CHOICE!
Not happy? You can also contribute by visiting my github:
https://github.com/Langenscheiss/bibitnow
Main Features
- Versatility: Generates bibliography items of journal articles, books, theses and generic web pages in the Bibtex, RIS, Endnote, APA, MLA, (B)Arnold S. or any user-defined format.
- Quick workflow: No more need to mess with the publisher's export button! One click or key stroke to extract the data and either show it in the popup (DEFAULT: ALT+C) , automatically copy it to clipboard (DEFAULT: Alt+W), or to download it as file (DEFAULT: ALT+Q). In the popup, a second click or key stroke lets you copy the data, open a redirection link or download/open the citation with your favorite library software. The extension furthermore comes with a set of options purely aimed at improving your workflow. For example, the plugin automatically generates a clickable and easily copyable DOI link if a DOI is found, or any other used defined link based on the available citation data (e.g., search author on google). The plugin can also be configured to automatically highlight the citation text, enabling completely mouseless operation.
- Simplicity: The plugin only extracts, formats and exports bibliographic data, and its functions are only aimed at avoiding the most common nuisances in these three steps. No fancy library system included!
- Compatibility: An extensively tested set of fixed extraction and parsing rules combined with URL specific adjustments allows the plugin to work on abstract pages of many publishers, including Nature, Science, Elsevier, Springer and any publisher that cares to provide commonly formatted meta data. The extension furthermore works on journal article pages of the scientific databases PubMed and Scopus, and of the open access library arXiv. You can also cite books from various sources, such as Google books or the book section of Amazon, and news articles from any news website providing json linked data in the schema.org format.
- Modifiability: Each citation format comes with a number of easily reachable and adjustable settings. Moreover, for the advanced user/contributor, the flexible data extraction and parsing system allows to easily add or improve the support for specific web pages. Add custom search queries via CSS selectors, and preprocess the extracted data. All in simple, URL-specific Javascript code.
- Optimized for Bibtex: Decide which bibliography field and how many authors to include, customize the bibkey, set whether to abbreviate the journal title and how to include URLs,. Special characters are automatically replaced by the corresponding Latex command, the format of names and initials is standardized, and math mode commands/formulas are preserved!
Credits/References
- XML formatted journal abbreviations are originally cited from the archive of the Woodward Library at the University Of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada,
http://woodward.library.ubc.ca/research-help/journal-abbreviations/
from the JabRef list available here,
https://github.com/JabRef/abbrv.jabref.org/tree/master/journals
and from the list provided by "The Theta Foundation",
https://www.theta.ro/jot/res/serials_list/annser_A.html
- Publisher address information has been obtained and adapted from several sources.
1.) University of Leicester Publisher List:
https://www2.le.ac.uk/offices/english-association/yw/publishers
2.) Deutscher Bildungsserver:
https://www.bildungsserver.de/institutionen_de.html?Katego=11&Name=&Ort=&Land=0&Staat=0&Schlagwort=&suchen=finden
3.) Wiki publisher lists:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_English-language_book_publishing_companies
https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liste_deutschsprachiger_Verlage
- All latex commands for character replacements are cited from the XML Entity Definitions for Characters (3rd Edition) published by the W3C Math Working Group.
https://www.w3.org/2003/entities/2007doc/
- All non-numerical HTML entities are replaced using a lookup tabled cited from the Character Entity Reference Chart published by the W3C HTML Working Group.
https://dev.w3.org/html5/html-author/charref
- A list of unicode identities of all letter characters in all languages
is cited from the XRegExp library source:
http://xregexp.com/
- The extension popup uses the CSS style reset kindly provided by Meyerweb.
http://meyerweb.com/eric/tools/css/reset/
- UTF16 (non-BMP) characters are read using a function kindly provided by the Mozilla Developer Network.
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/String/charCodeAt
Developer comments
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This add-on may also ask to:
- Input data to the clipboard
- Access your data for citation-needed.springer.com
More information
- Add-on Links
- Version
- 0.908
- Size
- 934.98 KB
- Last updated
- 3 years ago (Apr 15, 2022)
- Related Categories
- License
- Mozilla Public License 2.0
- Version History
Add to collection
Release notes for 0.908
version 0.908
--Citation formats--
* added option to further specify month format. Replaces checkbox to force integer format, but previous user settings are kept
--Site-specific adjusters--
* improved Scopus
* improved dynamic citation and date on springer link books/chapters
--Popup--
* Slightly adjusted position of reload button
--Citation formats--
* added option to further specify month format. Replaces checkbox to force integer format, but previous user settings are kept
--Site-specific adjusters--
* improved Scopus
* improved dynamic citation and date on springer link books/chapters
--Popup--
* Slightly adjusted position of reload button
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The function to automatically highlight the citation text is unfortunately affected by a long-standing bug in Firefox causing the extension popup to lose focus, in particular when opened with the keyboard short-cut. I have filed a bug here
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1647512
The bug has since been confirmed and I hope that Mozilla will fix it soon. For version 0.894, there will be "band-aid" work around for this: if the popup loses focus upon opening, it will rehighlight the citation text once it regains focus, which is when you click on the popup. It requires an extra click, but you don't need to manually highlight the citation text.