-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 120
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
Unsupported entry types #753
Comments
Probably "optional" types? |
The name suggested in the TeX.SX question was 'non-standard' which sounds better than 'not-supported-by-the-standard-styles types'. |
Yes, that's better. I'm a bit absent at the moment for various reasons, you may have realised. |
OK. I'll change the docs to 'non-standard' and will see if we need to lose a few more words about this. Luckily there are no pressing issues at the moment, but there were a few things where a second opinion or pair of eyes would be appreciated once you are more available. |
Done in df4444b comments are appreciated. |
How about a "call-to action"-like sentence to funnel updates to the styles and drivers? What's 1, 2 or 3 resources that people who are interested to help expand those should go to? |
What exactly did you have in mind? Unfortunately, there are not many "beginner's guides to The thing is that updates to the standard styles are dangerous. We can't have something that is backwards incompatible (OK, we have had our fair share of backwards incompatible changes, but I'd really like and try not to have too many more - at least not in a way that could affect many users or high-level features). The established stance has always been that we are sort of fine with the design decisions taken by PL and with the set of standard entry types. We might consider adding "interesting" new things if they need novel features. See for example #388. In the particular case of |
As @moewew says, the problem is that any 'beginners' stuff never takes people that far: you are basically doomed to get 'But I only want to change XXX', where XXX is something far from trivial/general. Entirely agree on sticking if possible close to PL's original ideas, and really trying to avoid changing established styles. |
|
I'm assuming this means the "standard styles". Would journal-specific styles be included in those "untouchable" ones? Because if yes, would a software-specific "citation stack" like CFF need to take up the baton, so to speak? |
I think Joseph was referring to the standard
If one doesn't want to regard the standard styles as a type of its own, they would fall into the last category. Note that most styles in category 2 are not official in that they were normally not commissioned by the entities behind the style guides. What's more since most publishers can't deal with Changes to the standard styles have to be well-considered. They are usually the first style users come into contact with and it is fair to assume that many people use them in one way or another. Since Changes to styles that implement prescriptive guides are more tricky. For changes in output adherence to the style guide probably trumps stability and continuity (what if the style guide changes, though?). On the one hand I can imagine that you would have a hard time convincing someone to implement support for Changes to styles in the last group have fewer constraints, but most (all?) LaTeX developers are aware of the need for backwards compatibility and stability of output, so it might be hard to lobby for changes that change the output of often-used types significantly. Let me repeat that for the specific case of |
Small update: 95ca156 'promotes' |
See https://tex.stackexchange.com/q/434281/35864 and force11/force11-sciwg#48 (comment). It seems that the label "unsupported" for the entry types of §2.1.3 Unsupported Types causes some confusion.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: