From: Eric Durant Subject: Re: Endnote Date: 05 Jul 2000 00:00:00 GMT Message-ID: <3963E91C.D7E4AD5D@engin.umich.edu> Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit References: <8jhbfh$n6f$1@enyo.uwa.edu.au> X-Accept-Language: en,pdf Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii X-Complaints-To: usenet@eecs.umich.edu X-Trace: news.eecs.umich.edu 962848987 66356 141.213.6.60 (6 Jul 2000 02:03:07 GMT) Organization: EECS Dept. Univ. of Michigan Mime-Version: 1.0 Newsgroups: comp.text.tex DIAMOND Mark wrote: >I use Endnote along with Tex, basically embedding Endnote references >as comments in the TeX file and stripping them out with 'sed' and >'egrep' before actually creating the reference list for my TeX >document from them. > >I wondered if anyone might do something similar, and whether it is >possible to run Endnote in a batch (command line) mode. I can't see >anything in the Help about it, but it would certainly >simplify the manual process I use at the moment. EndNote 3.1.2 will export a BibTeX .bib file. Just set the Styles folder to Styles/Export below the installation directory and then select the BibTeX.ens style, select File|Export and set the file type to Text. EndNote doesn't have the same data integrity rules that BibTeX does, but when you run bibtex it will warn you of missing and conflicting fields, which can then be fixed in the EndNote file and re-exported. -- Eric Durant http://www.edurant.com/