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If a style uses a term in a form that is undefined (even after Localeįallback), there is fallback to other forms: “verb-short” first falls back to “editor” and “editors” for the “editor” term Terms may be defined for specific forms by using cs:term with the optional “page” and “pages”), in theĬontent of the child elements cs:single and cs:multiple, respectively. Where singular and plural variants are needed (e.g. Terms are either directly defined in the content of cs:term, or, in cases To one of the terms listed in Appendix II - Terms. Each cs:term element must carry a name attribute, set Terms are defined with cs:term elements, child elements by using the “and” term, “Doe and Smith”Īutomatically becomes “Doe und Smith” when the style locale is switched fromĮnglish to German). Locale fallback takes precedence over fallback of The case when they are defined as empty strings (e.g. “de”), the (primary) dialect isįallback stops once a localizable unit has been found. If the chosen output locale is a language (e.g. xml:lang set to “en-US” (American English).(only applicable when the chosen locale is a secondary dialect) xml:lang set to matching primary dialect, “de-DE” (Standard German).xml:lang set to matching language, “de” (German).xml:lang set to chosen dialect, “de-AT”.Is “de-AT” (Austrian German), localizable units are individually drawn from theįollowing sources, in decreasing order of priority: Locale fallback is best described with an example. At the moment of writing, the available locale files Option, or specific form of a term) is retrieved.įor dialects of the same language, one is designated the primary dialect. Locale fallback is the mechanism determiningįrom which of these sources each localizable unit (a date format, localized “en-US” forĪmerican English), whereas the optional cs:locale elements in styles canĮither lack the xml:lang attribute, or have it set to either a language Locale files provide localization data for language dialects (e.g. In addition, cs:link should not be used with rel set toĪn example of cs:info for an independent style: “independent-parent”, with the URI of the independent parent style set on In dependent styles, cs:link must be used with rel set to Language of the element’s content (the value must be an xsd:languageĬs:link, the attribute can also be used to indicate the language of the link The cs:link, cs:rights, cs:summary, cs:title andĬs:title-short elements may carry a xml:lang attribute to specify the The contents of cs:updated must be a timestamp that shows when the The contents of cs:title-short should be a shortened cs:title-short (optional) May appear once.
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The contents of cs:title should be the name of the The contents of cs:summary gives a (short) description The element may carry a licenseĪttribute to specify the URI of the license.
Mendeley change citation style license#
The contents of cs:rights specifies the license under Indicating when the style was initially created or made available. The cs:link element may contain content describing the link.
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TheĬs:eissn and cs:issnl elements may each be used once for the eISSN Identifier(s) of the journal for which the style was written. cs:issn/ cs:eissn/ cs:issnl (optional) The cs:issn element may be used multiple times to indicate the ISSN A stable, unique and dereferenceable URI is desired for The element should contain a URI to establish the identity Indicates the field(s) for which the style is relevant. To one of the discipline categories (see Appendix I - Categories), to “note” - the citation appears as a footnote or endnoteĬs:category may be used multiple times with the field attribute, set.Once to describe how in-text citations are rendered, using theĬitation-format attribute set to one of the following values: Styles may be assigned one or more categories. Respectively the name, email address and URI of the author or contributor. Within theseĮlements, the child element cs:name must appear once, while cs:emailĪnd cs:uri each may appear once. Independent styles, cs:info has the following child elements: cs:author and cs:contributor (optional) cs:author and cs:contributor, used to respectively acknowledge styleĪuthors and contributors, may each be used multiple times. The cs:info element contains the style’s metadata.