bookends-tools
jabref
bookends-tools | jabref | |
---|---|---|
2 | 21 | |
92 | 3,393 | |
- | 0.5% | |
1.8 | 9.9 | |
about 2 years ago | 7 days ago | |
AppleScript | Java | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
bookends-tools
-
Is it possible to create structured workflows in Raycast?
I wanted to copy (more or less) this workflow involving Bookends ref manager, that someone shared on GitHub. Is it possible with Raycast?
-
Zotero- ree, easy-to-use tool to collect, organize, cite, and share research
Is this (https://github.com/iandol/bookends-tools) the Bookends you referring to ? I don't care about citations. All I need is a PDF organizer have categories / tags and can add notes / make annotations.
jabref
- Ask HN: How do you save and browse external interesting URLs?
-
Is there a FOSS package to track reading list like Notion?
JabRef might work for you. Website link and GitHub link.
-
Drop down menus in Java Applications do not work (DWM, Arch Linux)
This issue https://github.com/JabRef/jabref/issues/5867 hints at JavaFX issue with the potential workaround of running with the environment variable GDK_DISPLAY=1.
-
Is there a website that turns DOIs and ISBNs into BibLaTeX entries?
I use JabRef for managing references, which allows you to generate entries via a DOI and saves to a local .bib file.
-
First msn class
JabRef
- JabRef: Reference manager that uses bibtex as a database
- JabRef – Free Reference Manager – Stay on Top of Your Literature
-
Zotero- ree, easy-to-use tool to collect, organize, cite, and share research
If the town is "online reference managers," you are probably right, but I would argue that reference managers are one of those areas where you really want something offline:
- Offline ensures that you do not suffer an externally caused downtime just before a deadline
- Offline ensures that you have a path for keeping your database throughout your research career, and to do system updates when _you_ want to.
- Offline ensures that if you leave academia, you will always have access to local copies of the academic papers you have referenced.
My favorite offline/local reference manager is `jabRef` [0] which stores all metadata directly in a bibtex-file. The GUI has an excellent pdf-integration, and everything is local and super fast.
Case in point: after a decade in industry, I am looking to get back into my academic fief. All the papers I ever read are in my Dropbox, and all I had to do to pick up where I left was download a current version jabRef and point it to my database which it read without any issues.
[0]: https://www.jabref.org/
-
Microsoft Word
I used JabRef throughout my work. It's indeed too late for my PhD work, but Zotero does indeed look very nice.
- Welches Literaturverwaltungsprogramm könnt ihr empfehlen?