Teach Yourself to Create Output Styles using EndNote 9, X or X1
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
|