4.1 Creating Citations
In order to create a citation,
press C-c [. RefTeX then prompts for a regular
expression which will be used to search through the database and
present the list of matches to choose from in a selection process
similar to that for selecting labels (see Referencing
Labels).
The regular expression uses an extended syntax:
‘&&’
defines a logic and for regular expressions. For
example ‘Einstein&&Bose’ will match all
articles which mention Bose-Einstein condensation, or which are
co-authored by Bose and Einstein. When entering the regular
expression, you can complete on known citation keys. RefTeX also
offers a default when prompting for a regular expression. This
default is the word before the cursor or the word before the
current ‘\cite’ command. Sometimes this may be
a good search key.
RefTeX
prefers to use BibTeX database files specified with a
\bibliography macro to collect its information. Just
like BibTeX, it will search for the specified files in the
current directory and along the path given in the environment
variable BIBINPUTS. If you do not use BibTeX, but
the document contains an explicit thebibliography
environment, RefTeX will collect its information from
there. Note that in this case the information presented in the
selection buffer will just be a copy of relevant
\bibitem entries, not the structured listing
available with BibTeX database files.
In
the selection buffer, the following keys provide special
commands. A summary of this information is always available from
the selection process by pressing ?.
- General
- ?
- Show a summary of available commands.
- 0-9,-
- Prefix argument.
- Moving around
- n
- Go to next article.
- p
- Go to previous article.
- Access to full database entries
- <SPC>
- Show the database entry corresponding to the article at
point, in another window. See also the f
key.
- f
- Toggle follow mode. When follow mode is active, the other
window will always display the full database entry of the
current article. This is equivalent to pressing <SPC>
after each cursor motion. With BibTeX entries, follow mode can
be rather slow.
- Selecting entries and creating the
citation
- <RET>
- Insert a citation referencing the article at point into the
buffer from which the selection process was started.
- mouse-2
- Clicking
with mouse button 2 on a citation will accept it like
<RET> would. See also variable
reftex-highlight-selection, Options
(Misc).
- m
- Mark the current entry. When one or several entries are
marked, pressing a or A accepts all
marked entries. Also, <RET> behaves like the a
key.
- u
- Unmark a marked entry.
- a
- Accept all (marked) entries in the selection buffer and
create a single
\cite macro referring to
them.
- A
- Accept all (marked) entries in the selection buffer and
create a separate
\cite macro for each of
it.
- e
- Create a new BibTeX database file which contains all
marked entries in the selection buffer. If no entries
are marked, all entries are selected.
- E
- Create a new BibTeX database file which contains all
unmarked entries in the selection buffer. If no entries
are marked, all entries are selected.
- <TAB>
- Enter a citation key with completion. This may also be a
key which does not yet exist.
- .
- Show insertion point in another window. This is the point
from where you called
reftex-citation.
- Exiting
- q
- Exit the selection process without inserting a citation
into the buffer.
- Updating the buffer
- g
- Start over with a new regular expression. The full database
will be rescanned with the new expression (see also
r).
- r
- Refine the current selection with another regular
expression. This will not rescan the entire database,
but just the already selected entries.
In order to
define additional commands for this selection process, the keymap
reftex-select-bib-map may be used.