Dear All,
I am in the process of writing a new package for inserting citations into org buffers using RefTeX. The current org-reftex command works alright, but it is not quite as
flexible as I would like it to be. I wanted to add an option to add
citations in footnotes. I also wanted to make it so that, when a bibtex
library is not set in the file, it uses the one set by RefTeX.
Additionally, I thought that it would be useful to have the package provide two sets of customizable RefTeX cite commands for use in org mode: one with traditional bibtex/natbib commands and one with biblatex commands. This would give users a
fairly functional set of defaults to choose from, and the option to
further customize them. It would also some minor use problems. Currently, org will export most bibtex and biblatex cite
commands correctly, even if they are not explicitly marked as latex,
but it will not export biblatex multicite commands, because it does not
recognize them as latex. Accordingly it will be useful to have org-reftex mark biblatex multicite commands as latex, but it will generally be unnecessary for it to mark other citations as such.
Let me know if you think such a package would be useful, and let me know what cite commands you think I should include. (I thought the default set should be somewhat basic, but useful for most common use case scenarios.)
I was also thinking of adding out of the box biblatex support for
org-bibtex. I use org-bibtex for my bibtex files and reading lists. It gives me a
unified way to organize my bibtex entries and keep track of what
sources I need to read or incorporate into specific projects.
Currently, customizing it to deal with biblatex fields is a bit of a
hassle, so I thought I might try to add an option that makes this process
easier.
Let me know if anyone else might be interested in this, or has any objections. Also let me know if you have any ideas about what entry types and fields I should include. Again I wanted to make it as useful and easily customizable as possible, without making it too bulky.