Difference between revisions of "Template:PlanckPapers"

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(+Displaying the list of references at the end of the page=)
(Citing a paper with a custom link)
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'''How it appears'''
 
'''How it appears'''
  
On the other hand it is shown in the {{PlanckPapers|planck2013-p09|isotropy and statistics paper}} that the above mentioned result is rubish.
+
On the other hand it is shown in the {{PlanckPapers|planck2013-p09||isotropy and statistics paper}} that the above mentioned result is rubish.
  
 
Note that in this last case, the second argument (the page number where the paper should open) does not need to have a value and it is perfectly fine for the corresponding slot in the template syntax (delimited by the <tt>||</tt> in the template syntax) to be emtpy. It is however mandatory to use the two <tt>|</tt> in order for the template to be interpreted correctly.
 
Note that in this last case, the second argument (the page number where the paper should open) does not need to have a value and it is perfectly fine for the corresponding slot in the template syntax (delimited by the <tt>||</tt> in the template syntax) to be emtpy. It is however mandatory to use the two <tt>|</tt> in order for the template to be interpreted correctly.

Revision as of 12:50, 25 July 2014

Description

The template PlanckPapers produces references for Planck papers in the text. There are three differences between this template and the BibCite.

  • PlanckPapers creates in the text a direct link to the papers being cited;
  • With PlanckPapers, it is possible to create a link to a specific page of the paper;
  • With PlanckPapers it is possible to create a link with text defined by the user;

The syntax of PlanckPapers is

{{PlanckPapers|label|page|link}}

where the thre parameters are as follows:

label
label used to cite the paper in LaTeX;
page
(optional parameter) page number where the paper paper should open when the user clicks on the link. When this parameter is not provided the paperwill open in page 1;
link
(optional parameter) text of the link to the paper. If not supplied the default text is one of Planck-2013-X, Planck-Early-X or Planck-Int-X or Planck-PreLaunch-X, for the Planck 2013 papers, Planck early papers, Planck internediate papers or Planck pre launch papers. The X stands for a roman numeral identifying the paper being cited;

Examples

Citing a paper using all the default values for optional parameters

What you type

{{PlanckPapers|planck2013-p01}}

How it appears

A very interesting result can be found in Planck-2013-I[1].

Citing a paper and opening it in a given page

What you type

{{PlanckPapers|planck2011-1-1|10}}

How it appears

On the other hand in Planck-Early-I[2] a demonstration is given of a most interesting fact.

Citing a paper with a custom link

What you type

{{PlanckPapers|planck2013-p09||blablabla}}

How it appears

On the other hand it is shown in the isotropy and statistics paper[3] that the above mentioned result is rubish.

Note that in this last case, the second argument (the page number where the paper should open) does not need to have a value and it is perfectly fine for the corresponding slot in the template syntax (delimited by the || in the template syntax) to be emtpy. It is however mandatory to use the two | in order for the template to be interpreted correctly.

Displaying the list of references at the end of the page

The convention followed in the Planck Explanatory Supplement is for the references to appear in the last section of each page. In order to achieve this, we suggest using:

==References==
<references />

This is how the list of references below was created.

References

  1. Planck 2013 results: Overview of Planck Products and Scientific Results, Planck Collaboration 2013 I, A&A, in press, (2014).
  2. Planck early results. I. The Planck mission, Planck Collaboration I, A&A, 536, A1, (2011).
  3. Planck 2013 results: Isotropy and statistics of the CMB, Planck Collaboration XXIII, A&A, in press, (2014).