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MODS  December 2014

MODS December 2014

Subject:

generating formatted citations for the web

From:

Matthew Roth <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Metadata Object Description Schema List <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Mon, 1 Dec 2014 14:07:11 -0500

Content-Type:

text/plain

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Parts/Attachments

text/plain (48 lines)

Hi List,

After careful consideration over the past several months our web application 
has decided to store our citations in MODs as opposed to our propriety and 
often problematic relational structure. Great news for sure. We are now able 
to generate EndNote files, RIS files, BibTex files, DC, and MARCXML. With 
the latter two being less desired by our end users. Ideally our board of 
directors and (more importantly) our end users would like to generate 
formatted HTML citations in various formats. For example, the way Google 
scholar will give the user the choice of MLA, ALA, and Chicago. The problem 
looks to be that while there are several leads, no available resource exists 
for a proper HTML transformation.

The most promising one is the citeproc project and the Citation Style 
Language[1]. They have projects in various stages in multiple languages. 
However, of the list I am only able to function in java, python, and 
JavaScript. The problem to me is that most expect a JSON format that is not 
too well documented--as best as I can tell, some of the discussions I've 
come across on this format our several years old at this point.  

Only one purports to work with MODs. citeproc-hs[2] a haskell library seems 
to have once expected MODs, but 1. I am not familiar with haskell and two it 
appears to not have been kept to date. I have not ruled it out completely, 
but need to consult a primer on haskell first. 

The python library, citeproc-py[3] claims to work with bibtex. However, they 
are still having issues with UTF-8[4]. Additionally, either the mapping is 
off in their BibTex parser or bibutils[5] is producing poor BibTex files 
from the inputted MODs files. Finally, the library according to the 
README.rst[6] is still not ready for production. 

Ideally, there would be an Xquery/XSL transformation that we could call from 
our web application which is built upon exist-db[7]. I suppose our next step 
may be writing our own transformation, however, it seems like coming to this 
as a programmer and not a librarian I may not be searching in all the right 
places. Do I need to write my own transformation, or has the wheel already 
been created? 



[1]http://citationstyles.org/
[2]https://hackage.haskell.org/package/citeproc-hs
[3]https://github.com/brechtm/citeproc-py
[4]https://github.com/brechtm/citeproc-py/issues/25
[5]https://sourceforge.net/projects/bibutils/
[6]https://github.com/brechtm/citeproc-py/blob/master/README.rst#citeproc-py
[7]http://exist-db.org/exist/apps/homepage/index.html

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