Article 2347 of comp.text.tex: Path: ai-lab!snorkelwacker!usc!wuarchive!uunet!mcsun!unido!tub!fauern!fauern!immd2.informatik.uni-erlangen.de!fritzke From: fritzke@immd2.informatik.uni-erlangen.de (B. Fritzke) Newsgroups: comp.text.tex Subject: BIBTEX to REFER conversion program (here it is) Message-ID: <3065@medusa.informatik.uni-erlangen.de> Date: 13 Aug 90 11:13:07 GMT Organization: Universitaet Erlangen, CS-Dep. IMMD II Lines: 139 Recently I posted a request for a program to convert bibliographic references in the bibtex format to the refer format. Beneath a lot of 'me too!'-messages I got an answer with an awk script, that could do part of the job. After some iterations of improvement there now exist a pretty good version, that fits at least my needs. Because many people seem to be interested in the program, I post it to this newsgroup. How to make it run: 1. put the stuff after the cut-line in a file called tex2refer (or t2r or so) 2. Make that file executable by typing chmod u+x tex2refer on your Unix system Bernd Fritzke Bernd Fritzke ------> e-mail: fritzke@immd2.informatik.uni-erlangen.de University of Erlangen, CS IMMD II, Martensstr. 3, 8520 Erlangen (FRG) --------------------------------- cut here ----------------------------------- #! /bin/sh # # tex2refer - converts bibtex entries to refer entries # # !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! # This software comes on a 'as is'-basis. # No guarantee for the correctness is given and no 'service' is provided # !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! # # This program (an awk skript) converts bibliographic references from the # bibtex-format to the refer-format. # it reads from stdin and writes to stdout: # # usage: tex2refer < file.bib > file.refer # # Be aware, that some information is neccessarily lost, because # # * several bibtex field names are mapped to the same refer filed name # e.g. publisher, organization and school are all mapped to %I # * refer doesn't support types for references (like @inproceedings, @article) # (therefore the inverse mapping refer2tex is mostly based on heuristics) # # In this program are only the more important (I.M.H.O.) field names covered. # If tex2refer encounters unknown field names, it will ignore them but store their # names in a list, which is displayed after the conversion process. # # With this list the program can easily be extended by adding entries to the # associative array 'refer' # # # Thanks to Lee, who provided the main part of the program and added # some useful comments for readability # # Bernd Fritzke (fritzke@immd2.informatik.uni-erlangen.de) # August 1990 # gawk ' #gnu awk, but works probably also with other versions BEGIN { FS = " " refer["author"] = "%A" refer["AUTHOR"] = "%A" refer["address"] = "%C" refer["ADDRESS"] = "%C" refer["year"] = "%D" refer["YEAR"] = "%D" refer["publisher"] = "%I" refer["PUBLISHER"] = "%I" refer["journal"] = "%J" refer["JOURNAL"] = "%J" refer["keywords"] = "%K" refer["KEYWORDS"] = "%K" refer["pages"] = "%P" refer["PAGES"] = "%P" refer["title"] = "%T" refer["TITLE"] = "%T" refer["volume"] = "%V" refer["VOLUME"] = "%V" refer["city"] = "%C" refer["CITY"] = "%C" refer["booktitle"] = "%B" refer["BOOKTITLE"] = "%B" refer["note"] = "%o" refer["NOTE"] = "%o" refer["organization"] = "%I" refer["ORGANIZATION"] = "%I" refer["school"] = "%I" refer["SCHOOL"] = "%I" } /^@/ {next} # reference type (not supported by refer) next line # ---> "next" makes awk goto the start of the awk script & read the next # line of input, so here it is making it ignore lines starting # with an @ sign. # ensure that an = signs is surrounded by space: /\=/ { # "=" must be preceeded by `\` , also in line below gsub(/\=/, " & ") # this may cause NF to be updated... # Warning -- do not put single quotes in comments! This does not # work reliably in a shell script. } ($1 in refer && $2 == "=") { # Begin of a bibtex field definition gsub(/[{}]/, "") # deleting curly brackets gsub(/,$/, "") # deleting commas at end of line printf "%s ", refer[$1] for (i = 3; i <= NF; i++) { # Loop over the keywords ($2 is "=") printf " %s", $i # and print them } printf "\n" # newline on the end of the refer entry } (!($1 in refer) && $2 == "=") { #collect unknown keywords unknown[$1] = 1 next } /[^ ]/ { if ($2 != "=") { # This is not a first line of an entry # In this case, we are dealing with a continuation line. gsub(/[{}]/, "") # deleting curly braces gsub(/,$/, "") # deleting commas at end of line printf " " for (i = 1; i <= NF; i++) { # Loop over all the keywords printf " %s", $i # and print them } printf "\n" # newline on the end of the refer entry } } END { for (a in unknown) { print "------- unknown keyword: " a } } ' ${@+"$@"}