Man page - btool_faq(3)
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Manual
btool_faq
NAMEDESCRIPTION
PERL LIBRARY
Why arenāt the BibTeX "month" macros defined?
How do I append to a BibTeX file?
C LIBRARY
Is there a Python binding for btparse yet?
SEE ALSO
AUTHOR
COPYRIGHT
NAME
btool_faq - Frequently-Asked Questions about btparse and Text::BibTeX
DESCRIPTION
This document attempts to address questions that I have been asked several times, and are easy to answer -- but not by perusing the documentation. For various reasons, the answers tend to be thinly distributed across several man pages, making it difficult to figure out whatās going on. Hence, this man page will attempt to tie together various strands of thought, providing quick, focused, "How do I do X?" answers as opposed to lengthy descriptions of the capabilities and conventions of the btOOL libraries.
PERL LIBRARY
This section covers questions that users of "Text::BibTeX", the Perl component of btOOL , have asked.
Why arenāt the BibTeX "month" macros defined?
Because theyāre bibliography-specific, and "Text::BibTeX" by default doesnāt impose any assumptions about a particular type of database or data-processing domain on your entries. The problem arises when you parse entries from a file, say foo.bib that quite sensibly use the month macros ("jan", "feb", etc.) provided by the BibTeX standard style files:
$bibfile =
Text::BibTeX::File->new('foo.bib') # open file
or die "foo.bib: $!\n";
$entry = Text::BibTeX::Entry->new($bibfile); # parse
first entry
Using this code, you might get an "undefined macro" warning for every entry parsed from foo.bib . Apart from the superficial annoyance of all those warning messages, the undefined macros are expanded as empty strings, meaning you lose any information about them---not good.
You could always kludge it and forcibly define the month macros yourself. Prior to release 0.30, this had to be done by parsing a set of fake entries, but now "Text::BibTeX" provides a direct interface to the underlying macro table. You could just do this before parsing any entries:
use Text::BibTeX
qw(:macrosubs);
# ...
my %month = (jan => 'January', feb => 'February', ...
);
add_macro_text ($macro, $value)
while (($macro, $value) = each %month);
But thereās a better way thatās more in keeping with how things are done under BibTeX (where default macros are defined in the style file): use "Text::BibTeX"ās object-oriented analogue to style files, called structure modules. "Text::BibTeX" provides a structure module, "Text::BibTeX::Bib", that (partially) emulates the standard style files of BibTeX 0.99, including the definition of month macros. Structure modules are specified on a per-file basis by using the "set_structure" method on a "Text::BibTeX::File" object. Itās quite simple to tell "Text::BibTeX" that entries from $bibfile are expected to conform to the "Bib" structure (which is implemented by the "Text::BibTeX::Bib" module, but you donāt really need to know that):
$bibfile =
Text::BibTeX::File->new('foo.bib')
or die "foo.bib: $!\n";
$bibfile->set_structure ('Bib');
You probably shouldnāt hardcode the name of a particular structure in your programs, though, as there will eventually be a multitude of structure modules to choose from (just as there are a multitude of BibTeX style files to choose from). My preferred approach is to make the structure a command-line option which defaults to "Bib" (since thatās the only structure actually implemented as of this writing).
How do I append to a BibTeX file?
Just open it in append mode, and write entries to it as usual. Remember, a "Text::BibTeX::File" object is mainly a wrapper around an "IO::File" object, and the "Text::BibTeX::File::open" method (and thus "new" as well) is just a front-end to "IO::File::open". "IO::File::open", in turn, is a front-end either to Perlās builtin "open" (if called with one argument) or "sysopen" (two or three arguments). To save you the trouble of going off and reading all those man pages, hereās the trick: if you pass just a filename to "Text::BibTeX::File"ās "new" method, then itās treated just like a filename passed to Perlās builtin "open":
my $append_file
= Text::BibTeX::File->new(">>$filename")
or die "couldn't open $filename for appending:
$!\n";
opens $filename for appending. If, later on, you have an entry from another file (say $entry), then you can append it to $append_file by just writing it as usual:
$entry->write ($append_file);
See "append_entries" in the examples/ subdirectory of the "Text::BibTeX" distribution for a complete example.
C LIBRARY
This section covers frequently-asked questions about btparse , the C component of btOOL .
Is there a Python binding for btparse yet?
Not that I know of. I havenāt written one. If you do so, please let me know about it.
SEE ALSO
btparse, Text::BibTeX
AUTHOR
Greg Ward <gward@python.net>
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 1997-2000 by Gregory P. Ward. All rights reserved. This file is part of the Text::BibTeX library. This library is free software; you may redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.