That's not all. I've been doing work for the University of Chicago
Press (both as an employee and as a freelancer) for 20 years, and what
it does with "Chicago style" is laughable and bug-filled.
For instance, there is no provision whatsoever for including Series
information in a bibliography entry, so I always put it in the
"Comments" section. Lo and behold, when I clicked _every other_ style
in the short list of styles, the series, i.e. the comment, appeared at
the end of the entry!
It is completely unaware that Chicago requires all three of: "Smith
(1995) states that"; "Smith 1995 is the most authoritative treatment
of the topic"; and "... is the usual interpretation (Smith 1995)." It
only permits the last of the three. (You can "suppress" author, title,
or date, but if you "suppress" the author inside the reference, you
have to type the name outside the parentheses and it's ordinary text.)
If you've added a page number, and "suppress" the author in hopes of
getting "Smith (1995, 36)," then the comma and space disappear and the
date runs into the page number.
If you have more than one "Source" by an author, it insists on showing
the title, so that you have to manually "suppress" the title. Yet if
there are two titles by the same author in the same year, it does not
know to make them 1995a and 1995b. You can, however, add the a and b
within the Source, meaning that if a third item is added, you have to
go back and adjust the a, b, and c in the right order (normally
alphabetically within a year).
If you have more than one "Source" by an author, sometimes it replaces
the second etc. occurrence with an em-dash (supposed to be a 3-em
dash), and sometimes it doesn't.
If your Source is a chapter in a multivolume work -- such as the
Cambridge Ancient History, or an encyclopedia -- it has no idea what
to do with the volume number asked for in the entry form, and it
treats the chapter title as a book title.
The entry forms themselves are idiotic. For a journal article, the
line for Volume Number is way down at the bottom of the "More" lines
instead of immediately before the year where it is expected.
For "Book Section," i.e. contribution to an edited volume, way at the
top is an entry called "Author of Book," which is meaningless in this
context, and way at the bottom is the entry for "Editor."
And while it does properly treat the editor of a volume as the author
when the volume itself is a bibliography listing, it places a comma
after the editor's name and a space, but not the label "ed."
***
I don't know what all the other styles in the brief list are supposed
to be, but several of them exhibit delimiters or codes within
bibliography entries, such as degree signs and double slashes.
On Sep 9, 1:13*pm, DiSSo <Di...@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote:
> Wish I had known that before I wasted my money on purchasing office. The
> bibliographic features are nice, but it's obvious that whoever designed them
> has not recently been a student. There is no way to cite online achedemic
> periodicals such as those from Jstor. The Web site option has no fields for
> journal name, issue, and edition, and the journal option has no field forthe
> host url.
>
> "Bob * Buckland ?:-)" wrote:
>
>
>
> > Hi Alireza,
>
> > It's a excellent suggestion, but one that isn't, unfortunately, likely to happen I fear, unless one of the 'new batch' of graduates
> > or intern hires at Microsoft *might create them. *The folks that helped create that feature for Word 2007 have left the Word team
> > and moved tohttp://officelabs.comand while the MS folks are probably working on improving the next version there doesn't seem to
> > be too much left over for what used to be called 'sustaining engineering' work (i.e. working on the released product to keep it
> > fresh, alive and active).
>
> > The feature is basically written in XML, so it's 'extensible' and therehave been a couple of efforts at making translators to move
> > the formats between BibUtils and other reference software and I suspectthere was an expectation that folks at various schools where
> > there are folks who might be able to 'whip out quick XML' would be publishing additional .XSL files for different formats that could
> > be shared and simply dropped into the Bibiliography folder for use by Word 2007 users, but as with other similar
> > efforts/expectations, this hasn't happened and Microsoft really hasn't been a lot of help on doing this beyond one or two 'how to
> > get started' articles.
>
> > Microsoft Research has a Word 2007 add-in to work with NLM/NLH citations within Word but even there the add-in does some really poor
> > things, such as rename the 'Add-Ins' tab in Word for its own use, even though it leaves the content from other addins there.
> > ================
> > * <<"Alireza" <Alir...@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in messagenews
874EE06-D37C-4557-A318-(E-Mail Removed)...
> > Hi everyone.
> > I suggest that it would be very useful if Microsoft embed mor styles in
> > biblography section. It is better that contain all style that Endnote X
> > software has, become embeded in word and then importation of referencesitems
> > from Google scholar become available. >>
> > --
>
> > Bob *Buckland *?:-)
> > MS Office System Products MVP
>
> > * *Courtesy is not expensive and can pay big dividends*-