How to cite paragraphs rather than pages from bibliography reference?biblatex: How to omit “p.” at...

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How to cite paragraphs rather than pages from bibliography reference?


biblatex: How to omit “p.” at cite?Can I make biblatex refrain from assuming my postnote (which consists of a number) is a page number?How do I cite laws or regulations in biblatex?How to automatically cite your own publications in a resume?Separate bibliography in Roman numerals, citeable everywhereFormatting biblatex citation to handle non-latin (Japanese) author namesManual citation of specific references with biblatex-chicagoHow to quote encyclopedia articles differently from books, magazines, etc. with Biblatex?Use roman numerals for cite in BibLaTeXIgnoring some citations in reference list, but keeping consecutive numberingPage range in multiple citation with sortingCite Custom Field in apacite













3















Quoting a reference using biblatex, it is possible to add an optional argument to cite in order to specify the page number that is being quoted, such as in



cite[20]{foo}


which will produce something like "[Foo, p. 20]".



My question is if there is some package or some hack that will allow to do the same without the "p.".



The goal is to be able to cite specific paragraphs, rather than pages. The paragraphs happen to be numbered by roman numerals, so the idea is to be able to do something like:



citep[XXVI]{foo}


and get something like "[Foo, XXVI]".










share|improve this question


















  • 1





    See also biblatex: How to omit “p.” at cite? and Can I make biblatex refrain from assuming my postnote (which consists of a number) is a page number?

    – moewe
    May 31 '17 at 18:22
















3















Quoting a reference using biblatex, it is possible to add an optional argument to cite in order to specify the page number that is being quoted, such as in



cite[20]{foo}


which will produce something like "[Foo, p. 20]".



My question is if there is some package or some hack that will allow to do the same without the "p.".



The goal is to be able to cite specific paragraphs, rather than pages. The paragraphs happen to be numbered by roman numerals, so the idea is to be able to do something like:



citep[XXVI]{foo}


and get something like "[Foo, XXVI]".










share|improve this question


















  • 1





    See also biblatex: How to omit “p.” at cite? and Can I make biblatex refrain from assuming my postnote (which consists of a number) is a page number?

    – moewe
    May 31 '17 at 18:22














3












3








3








Quoting a reference using biblatex, it is possible to add an optional argument to cite in order to specify the page number that is being quoted, such as in



cite[20]{foo}


which will produce something like "[Foo, p. 20]".



My question is if there is some package or some hack that will allow to do the same without the "p.".



The goal is to be able to cite specific paragraphs, rather than pages. The paragraphs happen to be numbered by roman numerals, so the idea is to be able to do something like:



citep[XXVI]{foo}


and get something like "[Foo, XXVI]".










share|improve this question














Quoting a reference using biblatex, it is possible to add an optional argument to cite in order to specify the page number that is being quoted, such as in



cite[20]{foo}


which will produce something like "[Foo, p. 20]".



My question is if there is some package or some hack that will allow to do the same without the "p.".



The goal is to be able to cite specific paragraphs, rather than pages. The paragraphs happen to be numbered by roman numerals, so the idea is to be able to do something like:



citep[XXVI]{foo}


and get something like "[Foo, XXVI]".







biblatex citing






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked May 31 '17 at 7:14









DalkerDalker

237110




237110








  • 1





    See also biblatex: How to omit “p.” at cite? and Can I make biblatex refrain from assuming my postnote (which consists of a number) is a page number?

    – moewe
    May 31 '17 at 18:22














  • 1





    See also biblatex: How to omit “p.” at cite? and Can I make biblatex refrain from assuming my postnote (which consists of a number) is a page number?

    – moewe
    May 31 '17 at 18:22








1




1





See also biblatex: How to omit “p.” at cite? and Can I make biblatex refrain from assuming my postnote (which consists of a number) is a page number?

– moewe
May 31 '17 at 18:22





See also biblatex: How to omit “p.” at cite? and Can I make biblatex refrain from assuming my postnote (which consists of a number) is a page number?

– moewe
May 31 '17 at 18:22










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















9














You can use nopp to suppress the page prefix 'p.'/'pp.'



cite[nopp 20]{sigfridsson}




If you want to always suppress the page prefix, use



DeclareFieldFormat{postnote}{mknormrange{#1}}
DeclareFieldFormat{multipostnote}{mknormrange{#1}}


mknormrange is a fairly recent addition to biblatex, so if the command is undefined when you add it, you probably just want to try #1 instead of mknormrange{#1} (or say providecommand*{mknormrange}[1]{#1}).





If you want to suppress the 'p.'/'pp.' for a particular entry, add



pagination = {none},


to the .bib entry. Instead of none, you can also have (the default) page or one of column, line, verse, section or paragraph.






share|improve this answer

























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    1 Answer
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    1 Answer
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    active

    oldest

    votes









    9














    You can use nopp to suppress the page prefix 'p.'/'pp.'



    cite[nopp 20]{sigfridsson}




    If you want to always suppress the page prefix, use



    DeclareFieldFormat{postnote}{mknormrange{#1}}
    DeclareFieldFormat{multipostnote}{mknormrange{#1}}


    mknormrange is a fairly recent addition to biblatex, so if the command is undefined when you add it, you probably just want to try #1 instead of mknormrange{#1} (or say providecommand*{mknormrange}[1]{#1}).





    If you want to suppress the 'p.'/'pp.' for a particular entry, add



    pagination = {none},


    to the .bib entry. Instead of none, you can also have (the default) page or one of column, line, verse, section or paragraph.






    share|improve this answer






























      9














      You can use nopp to suppress the page prefix 'p.'/'pp.'



      cite[nopp 20]{sigfridsson}




      If you want to always suppress the page prefix, use



      DeclareFieldFormat{postnote}{mknormrange{#1}}
      DeclareFieldFormat{multipostnote}{mknormrange{#1}}


      mknormrange is a fairly recent addition to biblatex, so if the command is undefined when you add it, you probably just want to try #1 instead of mknormrange{#1} (or say providecommand*{mknormrange}[1]{#1}).





      If you want to suppress the 'p.'/'pp.' for a particular entry, add



      pagination = {none},


      to the .bib entry. Instead of none, you can also have (the default) page or one of column, line, verse, section or paragraph.






      share|improve this answer




























        9












        9








        9







        You can use nopp to suppress the page prefix 'p.'/'pp.'



        cite[nopp 20]{sigfridsson}




        If you want to always suppress the page prefix, use



        DeclareFieldFormat{postnote}{mknormrange{#1}}
        DeclareFieldFormat{multipostnote}{mknormrange{#1}}


        mknormrange is a fairly recent addition to biblatex, so if the command is undefined when you add it, you probably just want to try #1 instead of mknormrange{#1} (or say providecommand*{mknormrange}[1]{#1}).





        If you want to suppress the 'p.'/'pp.' for a particular entry, add



        pagination = {none},


        to the .bib entry. Instead of none, you can also have (the default) page or one of column, line, verse, section or paragraph.






        share|improve this answer















        You can use nopp to suppress the page prefix 'p.'/'pp.'



        cite[nopp 20]{sigfridsson}




        If you want to always suppress the page prefix, use



        DeclareFieldFormat{postnote}{mknormrange{#1}}
        DeclareFieldFormat{multipostnote}{mknormrange{#1}}


        mknormrange is a fairly recent addition to biblatex, so if the command is undefined when you add it, you probably just want to try #1 instead of mknormrange{#1} (or say providecommand*{mknormrange}[1]{#1}).





        If you want to suppress the 'p.'/'pp.' for a particular entry, add



        pagination = {none},


        to the .bib entry. Instead of none, you can also have (the default) page or one of column, line, verse, section or paragraph.







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited 2 mins ago

























        answered May 31 '17 at 7:30









        moewemoewe

        94k10115354




        94k10115354






























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