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Citation Style Language

Citation Style Language
CitationStyles.org, home of the Citation Style Language (CSL), a popular open XML-based language to describe the formatting of citations and bibliographies.
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Published

Over the past few months, Citation Style Language developers have worked to address a backlog of feature requests. This work will be reflected in two upcoming releases. The first of these, 1.0.2, is slated for release shortly. Its focus is on easy to implement, non-controversial additions, principally new item types, fields, and terms.

Published
Author Rintze M. Zelle

For their third straight year, Mendeley and Elsevier have kindly supported the open source Citation Style Language project with a $5000 donation. Donations allow us to hire developers for small projects, purchase materials such as the latest style manuals, and support our style repository maintainers. We’re very grateful for this continuing sponsorship! In July, Carles Pina from Mendeley also updated over 150 CSL styles for Elsevier journals.

Published
Author Rintze M. Zelle

CSL has seen a lot of growth in recent years: more than 20 software products use CSL (see the citationstyles.org frontpage), and we offer over 6750 free citation styles, covering thousands of scientific journals. We could only have come this far with our great user community, and with a lot of institutional support from Mendeley, Papers, Zotero, and others.

Published
Author Rintze M. Zelle

The Citation Style Language (CSL) team is happy to announce CSL 1.0.1. CSL 1.0.1 is an (almost completely) backwards compatible release, and CSL 1.0 styles and locale files don’t have to be updated to work with CSL 1.0.1-compatible software. CSL 1.0.1 is a relatively minor update, but adds a variety of new features to CSL, and an extra layer of polish to both the specification and schema.

Published
Author Rintze M. Zelle

Changelog The CSL 1.0 specification update of 2010-05-30 includes the following changes: clarified behavior of the line-spacing and entry-spacing attributes [diff] clarified behavior of the position condition when used for bibliography formatting [diff] clarified behavior of the et-al-subsequent attributes [diff] changed the handling of name suffixes (now aligns with Chicago Manual of Style) [diff] changed et-al abbreviation to use a

Published
Author Rintze M. Zelle

The Citation Style Language (CSL) team is proud to announce CSL 1.0, a free and open XML language for the formatting of citations and bibliographies. A New Home CitationStyles.org is the new home of the CSL project, hosting the schema, documentation, project news, and more. In the near future CitationStyles.org will also host the style repository currently found at www.zotero.org/styles.