[R] NEWBIE: @BOOK help?

Abhijit Dasgupta Abhijit.Dasgupta at mail.jci.tju.edu
Thu Feb 8 22:22:43 CET 2007


as can Google Scholar, which isn't as mathematically oriented. I've 
seen, though, that it isn't quite as accurate as CIS

Abhijit
David Scott wrote:
> On Thu, 8 Feb 2007, Andrew Perrin wrote:
>
>   
>> It's BibTeX source -- used for the BibTeX bibliography management system
>> that integrates with LaTeX.
>>
>> http://www.ecst.csuchico.edu/~jacobsd/bib/formats/bibtex.html
>> http://www.ctan.org
>>
>>     
>
> A further point is that mathematically oriented databases including the 
> Current Index to Statistics (http://www.statindex.org/CIS/) can output 
> bibliographic details in BibTeX format. You can obtain the reference in 
> BibTeX form from the database and easily incorporate it into your document 
> or private BibTeX database of references.
>
> David Scott
>
>
> _________________________________________________________________
> David Scott	Department of Statistics, Tamaki Campus
>  		The University of Auckland, PB 92019
>  		Auckland 1142,    NEW ZEALAND
> Phone: +64 9 373 7599 ext 86830		Fax: +64 9 373 7000
> Email:	d.scott at auckland.ac.nz
>
> Graduate Officer, Department of Statistics
>
> ______________________________________________
> R-help at stat.math.ethz.ch mailing list
> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help
> PLEASE do read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html
> and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.
>



More information about the R-help mailing list