biblatex-csl-converter-tsdeprecated

a set of converters: biblatex => json, json => biblatex, json => CSL

Usage no npm install needed!

<script type="module">
  import biblatexCslConverterTs from 'https://cdn.skypack.dev/biblatex-csl-converter-ts';
</script>

README

This is a fork of biblatex-csl-converter which adds TypeScript and crossref support. The below README is taken from the original package.

biblatex-csl-converter Build Status

A set of JavaScript converters: biblatex => json, json => csl, and json => biblatex

Usage:

import {BibLatexParser} from "biblatex-csl-converter"

// synchronous:
let parser = new BibLatexParser(input, {processUnexpected: true, processUnknown: true})
let bib = parser.parse()

// asynchronous:
let parser = new BibLatexParser(input, {processUnexpected: true, processUnknown: true, async: true})
parser.parse().then((bib) => { ... })

Try demo here.

FAQ

Q: Why do you use a different json as internal format and not just the json format of CSL? Wouldn't that save you one conversion step?

A: Unfortunately, the CSL json cannot hold all the information we import from biblatex, so if we used the json of CSL internally, we would loose information that we may want to export in biblatex later on.

Q: Do you import all information from the imported bibtex/biblatex files?

A: We only keep the information found in any of the required or optional fields defined in the BibLatex documentation. Other fields are removed upon import.

Q: How do I see if there are errors when parsing the BiBTeX/BibLatex file?

A: There is an array of errors that were encountered while parsing the file that can be found at parser.errors after you get the parser.output. There is also parser.warnings for less serious issues.

Q: I need access to the raw/non-processed contents of certain fields. What do I do?

A: The fields in their almost raw form can be found under entry.raw_fields[FIELD_NAME].

Q: What if I need to process fields that don't follow the biblatex definition?

A: You can initialize the parser with a config object like this: new BibLatexParser(inputString, {processUnexpected: true, processUnknown: {collaborator: 'l_name'}}). The processUnexpected setting will enable parsing of fields that are known, but shouldn't be in the bibliography entry due to its type. The processUnknown will allow parsing of fields that are entirely unknown. You can either set it to true, or you can set it to an object containing descriptions for the field types these unknown fields should be processed as. If a field is not specified, it will be processed as a literal field (f_literal). These fields will be available under entry.unexpected_fields[FIELD_NAME] and entry.unknown_fields[FIELD_NAME] respectively.

Q: I use variables in my biblatex files. Will your converter read them?

A: Yes, but in order for the converter to be able to create a string, the variables need to be defined. Undefined variables can also be handled by the biblatex importer/exporter, but when exporting to CSL, they just print out the variable name in an an HTML tag that is not supported by citeproc (and an error is thrown).

Q: I want to run the demo locally?

A: http-server is handy. Do a global install of http-server with npm install http-server -g and run http-server docs.

Q: I want to include this on my website and I don't use npm packages, etc. . Is there a file I can just add to the header of my webpage?

A: Yes, you can download such a file here.