Main Page/Endnote

From phurvitz
< Main Page
Revision as of 23:22, 9 November 2007 by Phil Hurvitz (talk | contribs)
Jump to: navigation, search

Term lists in Endnote function as abbreviation lists for bibliographies. Some journals require full jouornal names in references, and some require abbreviations (and some that require abbreviations use dots, and others don't, e.g.,

Prerequisites

  1. Endnote installed on the PC
  2. perl installed on the PC

Fixing abbreviated journal names

Some of my references had the full journal name and others had abbreviations. This caused problems when I needed a bibliography in a specific format.

I got a copy of term lists from the University of Queensland.

To update the term list in Endnote

  1. Open the library.
  2. Click on Tools on the menu bar and choose Define Term Lists
  3. Highlight Journals
  4. Select all journals.
  5. Delete (right-click/Cut). Do not remove the term list altogehter; there does not seem to be a way to add the journals term list back with all the fields in EndNote 7, contrary to the documentation.
  6. Click on the Import List button.
  7. Select the text file to be imported and click on the Open button (I used the Medical, Biosciences, and Chemistry lists).

To fix the list (deprecated, as there is no standard for which abbreviation has the dots)

  1. Export the term list (click the Export List button). I saved this as pmh_phd_journals_term.txt.
  2. Separate the list into columns, one for the full title, and one each for the abbreviated titles.
    cut -f1 pmh_phd_journals_term.txt > full.txt
    cut -f2 pmh_phd_journals_term.txt > abb1.txt
    cut -f3 pmh_phd_journals_term.txt  | sed "s/\./\\./g" > abb2.txt
  3. Join the columns back together with some sed to pre-format the sed scripts for the master edit process:

A perl script for creating a sed script to fix the term list

also creates a standardized term list

#! /usr/bin/perl -W
use strict;
use warnings;

# construct sed scripts for fixing endnote

# open output files
open (SED, '>sed_nodots.sed');
open (OUTTERM, '>pmh_phd_journals_term_fixed.txt');
# read input file
open (INFILE, "<pmh_phd_journals_term.txt") or die "cannot open";
while (my $record = <INFILE>) {
    chomp $record;
    # split into pieces with tabs
    my @list = split(/\t/, $record);
    # how many substrings?
    my $count = @list;
    # extract the first 2 substrings
    my $ss1 = $list[0];
    my $ss2 = $list[1];
    # if 3 substrings
    if ($count == 3) {
        # get the 3rd substring
	my $ss3 = $list[2];
	# handle dots
	$ss3 =~ s/\./\\\./g;
	$ss2 =~ s/\./\\\./g;
        print SED "s|$ss3|$ss1|\n";
        print SED "s|$ss2|$ss1|\n";
	# if neither substring has a dot
	if (($ss2 !~ m/\./) && ($ss3 !~ m/\./)) {
	    print OUTTERM "$ss1\t$ss3\t$ss2\n";
	}
        # if the 2nd ss has a dot and the 3rd does not
	if (($ss2 =~ m/\./) && ($ss3 !~ m/\./)) {
	    print OUTTERM "$ss1\t$ss3\t$ss2\n";
	}
        # if the 3nd ss has a dot and the 2rd does not
    	if (($ss2 !~ m/\./) && ($ss3 =~ m/\./)) {
	    print OUTTERM "$ss1\t$ss2\t$ss3\n";
	}
        # if both ss have dots
    	if (($ss2 =~ m/\./) && ($ss3 =~ m/\./)) {
	    print OUTTERM "$ss1\t$ss2\t$ss3\n";
	}
    }
}
close INFILE;
close SED;
close OUTTERM;

To create a series of XML files for import to EndNote

#! /usr/bin/perl -w
use warnings;

# read the sed scripts to fix the endnote library

# open the xml library and read it all in
open (LIBRARY, "<pmh_phd.xml") or die "cannot open";
my $lines = <LIBRARY>;
close (LIBRARY);

# remove the header and trailer stuff
$lines =~ s/<XML><RECORDS>//;
$lines =~ s/<\/RECORDS><\/XML>//;

# open and start reading the list of journal names
open (SED, "<sed_nodots.sed") or die "cannot open sed_dots.sed";
$count = 0;
while (<SED>) {
    $count++;
    print "$count\n";
    $sedstr = $_;
    chomp $sedstr;
    @substr = split(/\|/, $sedstr);
    $sub1 = $substr[1];
    $sub2 = $substr[2];
    $sub2 =~ s/\&/\&amp\;/g;
    $lines =~ s/<SECONDARY_TITLE>$sub1<\/SECONDARY_TITLE>/<SECONDARY_TITLE>$sub2<\/SECONDARY_TITLE>/g;
}
close (SED);

# an array of lines
$lines =~ s/\/RECORD>/\/RECORD>\n/g;
@linelist = split(/\n/, $lines);

# process....
$outfile = "xml_0.xml";
open (OUT, ">$outfile");
$count = 0;
foreach $line (@linelist) {
    $count++;
    # substitute
    #$line =~ s/<\/(\w+)>/<\/$1>\n/g;
    $line =~ s/<styles><\/styles>//g;
    print OUT $line;
    $f = $count/100;
    $mod = $count%10;
    $r = (int($count/10))%10;
    if (($mod == 0) && ($r == 0)) {
       close (OUT);
       $outfile = join("\.", join("_", "xml", $f), "xml");
       open (OUT, ">$outfile");
    }
}
close (OUT);