By John M Quick The R Tutorial Series provides a collection of user-friendly tutorials to people who want to learn how to use R for statistical analysis. My Statistical Analysis with R book is available from Packt Publishing and Amazon.
R Tutorial Series: Citing R with EndNote
Unfortunately, due to the vexing complexities of academic style guides and the limitations of associated software packages, citing a non-standard name, such as Cher, Prince, or R Development Core Team can be problematic. Thankfully, I have discovered a simple trick in Word and EndNote that allows for the accurate automatic formatting of R citations. Note that this method was developed using Word 2011 and EndNote X4 for Mac. I am unaware of the differences between operating systems and software versions, but it is anticipated that this method will work for almost anyone.
However, this is where things take an untimely turn. EndNote will try to interpret that peculiar name as a series of first, last, and middle names, which leads to inaccurate citations.
This tells EndNote that R Core Development Team is a complete last name of an author that has no first name. Hence, EndNote uses what it has (a last name with no first name) in generating its citations.
Note: The official citation for R can be found by issuing the citation() command in the R console.
Posted by
John
19
comments
Labels:
APA,
bibliography,
citations,
EndNote,
R Project,
R Tutorial Series,
tutorial,
Word
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)



