Teach Yourself to Create Output Styles using EndNote 9, X, X1 or X2
This tutorial will take you through the steps required to create an output style. We assume that you already possess a basic familiarity with EndNote and understand how an EndNote output style is used to format references in a paper.
As explained in Section 2 of the tutorial, all bibliographic styles fall into one of three categories:
- author/date
- numbered
- footnotes
The following listing of the contents of this tutorial indicates which sections are relevant to each type of style.
- Section 1: Introduction
- (All types of style)
- Section 2: Types of Styles
- (All types of style)
- Section 3: Creating a New Style
- (All types of style)
- Section 4: General Features of the Style
- (All types of style)
- Section 5: In-text Citations: The Template and Ambiguous Citations
- (Author/date styles and Numbered styles)
- Section 6: In-text Citations: Author Lists and Author Name
- (Author/date styles)
- Section 7: Citation Numbering
- (Numbered styles)
- Section 8: In-text Citations: Sort Order
- (Author/date styles and Footnote styles)
- Section 9: Rules for Style Templates
- (All types of style)
- Section 10: The Bibliography: Templates
- (All types of style)
- Section 11: The Bibliography: Author Lists and Author Name
- (All types of style)
- Section 12: The Bibliography: Editor Lists and Editor Names
- (All types of style)
- Section 13: The Bibliography: Layout, Sort Order and Capitalization
- (All types of style)
- Section 14: Footnote Styles
- (Footnote styles)
- Section 15: Figures and Tables
- (All types of style)
- Section 16: Testing the Style
- (All types of style)
Begin the Tutorial
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