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In-Text Citations are comprised of two parts:
settings that determine the overall look of the in-text citation
definitions that contains actual in-text information
We recommend establishing the Citation Settings first and then adding the actual in-text information.
To define the in-text citation settings:
In the Citation Type drop-down select In-Text Citations Only (or In-Text Citations and Notes if you want footnotes/endnotes in addition to in-text citations).
Click on the In-Text Citation tab in the main area of the output style editor.
Click Citation Settings to expand and display the setting options. This is where you define how the citation in the text of your paper is formatted. There are two general types of in-text citations: Numeric and Author/Date. For each you must define what you want to Precede and Follow the citation. RefWorks defaults to ( ) as this is the most common option.
Numeric:
If the in-text citation is numeric or you are creating endnotes, select the Use Only Reference Numbers in Citations. If you want the numbers superscripted, click Superscript citations (or you can choose bold, underline, italics, subscript).
Under Citation Separator, define a separator for displaying multiple numeric citations in one location. A comma is displayed by default so multiple in-text citations would appear as (1,2,3) or you can use a number range with the Number Range Separator, which defaults to a single dash and would appear as (1-3).
Author/Date:
Under Citation Separator, define a separator for displaying multiple citations in one location. With the Author/Date citations you must also define how the author and date should appear in the citation. This is done in the next section.
To create an in-text citation definition:
Click the In-Text Citation tab.
By default, your in-text citation formatting will be created for references that are in a single language. You have the option to add additional language formats if your in-text citations will have references in more than one language). To create an output style that supports multiple languages, click here to learn about adding alternate languages.
Under Reference Type, select Generic.
You only define the citation format for the Generic Reference Type. This definition will be used for all reference types.
The Fields for this type box shows all the fields available for the Reference Type, Generic.
Select and move the fields you
need (for example: for an author/date citation, you would select the
Authors, Primary field and
click the right arrow icon
to move it to the Output
Field Order box, then you would select the Pub
Year field and click the right
arrow
to move it
over as well).
In the Output
Field Order box, select a field and look at the Field
Settings to the right of the
window. The Field Settings
change to guide you through the defining process. The first group
of settings, Field Settings,
is fairly consistent for each type of field. You also designate in
the Field Settings when that
particular field should print -- always, when the source type in the
reference is set to print or when the source type is set to electronic.
It determines the formatting of the field itself as opposed
to the format of the elements within the field. In some cases, such
as Volume, there is very little
that is needed. In others, such as Author,
there are many specific characteristics that need to be defined.
You can also add Field Comments
for each field used within a reference type. Field comments
also appear when adding a new reference or editing an existing reference.
Tip: Detailed information about Field Settings typically
used for defining an in-text citation are listed below. This
will help you become familiar with the different types of options
available for the various fields.
Under Preview of Citation Output, click the Update button to see the fields you have added and any field formatting you have added.
Enter any information you would like to include about this field. This field is information only and does not affect the formatting or output.
Since you have already set your Preceding and Following characters under Citation Settings you do not need to do that here.
Include All:
The number of author names to be included in the bibliography. You can include all of the names or some portion of them. Selecting Include All overrides the other settings. Enter 2 in the If more, show first box and select Italic. Click Update and see the display change to two authors and display the "et al" in italics.
To differentiate between citations that refer to different works but have the same author last name and year, RefWorks adds letters to the year.
(Smith 1998a, Smith 1998b)
RefWorks first attempts to print enough names to differentiate the citations but does not print more than the limits you set in Author Settings.
Anonymous:
By default, RefWorks inserts the word Anonymous in place of author names if the author field in a reference is left blank. If you want to insert another word, such as "Unknown", delete the word "Anonymous" and type "Unknown". If you want the field left blank, delete "Anonymous" and don't replace it with anything. If you want to replace the author with the title, click the Use Title box.
Separators:
Varies depending upon where the separator is located (i.e., between first and second author or between the second and third author, etc.). In our example under If only 2 use, press the spacebar type "and" (without the quote marks) then press the spacebar again. It will display as ( and ). You need to include a space on each side of the and or the result will be John JonesandBob Smith.
Leave the comma in the If more than 2 use box and in the Before Last box. Notice that there are spaces after the comma and before and after the and.
First Author:
These
settings may be different than the settings for subsequent authors.
Under Name select the correct
order of the names for the output style. For example, if the style
requires names to be last name first followed by a comma then the
first name and middle name select Last, First Middle. The Initial
box determines the format of the name. For example, if the first name
should be a full name and middle name an initial only, you should
select First M.
Tip: If you want only the last name of the author(s) to
appear, select Last in the
name box and do not worry about the Initial box (RefWorks will not
read it when only Last is selected)
Case Setting:
Under Case Setting, select any casing requirements. Leave None for our format for both the first and other authors.
Other Authors:
These options determine the setting for all names after the first author.
Single Author:
The Precede With and Follow With fields determine what comes before and after the author in a reference that contains only one author. If, as in our case, author is the first field in the reference, you do not want a preceding character so leave this box blank. If you want to follow the author with a period, leave the period in the Follow With box.
Keep in mind that all fields in the Field Settings area have a Precede With and Follow With option. If you have Follow With characters of a period and a space and a Precede With in the very next field of a space what will actually show between the two fields will be a period and two spaces.
Multiple Authors:
The Precede With and Follow With fields determine what comes before and after the author field in a reference that contains multiple authors.
Pub Year:
If you already set the dividing characters between the author and year in the Author Settings and have a following parenthesis in the Citation Settings you do not need to do anything in Pub Year