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Citation strings are composed of one or more elements. Non-nested citations are composed of four elements, three of which are directly user definable. The elements are concatenated together, in this order:
sc-citation-leader, and
has the default value of a string containing four spaces.sc-citation-delimiter visually separates
the citation from the text of the line. This variable has a
default value of ">" and for best results, the
string should consist of only a single character.sc-citation-separator, and has the
default value of a string containing a single space.For example, suppose you were using the default values for the
above variables, and Supercite provided the attribution string
‘Jane’. In this case, the composed,
non-nested citation string used might be something like "
Jane> ". This citation string will be inserted in front
of every line in the original message that is not already
cited.
Nested citations, being simpler than non-nested citations, are composed of the same elements, sans the attribution string. Supercite is smart enough to not put additional spaces between citation delimiters for multi-level nested citations.
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