Mycoheterotrophic Plants

How many of them are there?

Instructions for importing a bibliography into scratchpad using the RIS-format

For those
of us who do not use Endnote as the software for reference management,
Scratchpads offer three more data formats for importing bibliographic data. For
me, the RIS-format turned out to be the less complicated. Many bibliographic
software has features to facilitate the export of content via this format.

RIS is a
text file which assigns every field of a data set with a preceding tag. This
tag always has 6 characters of the following structure: two upper case letters
or numbers, two spaces, a dash, one space (e.g. “AU  - “). The letters and numbers specify the data field. Each data
field with its tag is to be terminated by a “carriage return/line feed” (hit
enter). Each data set must start with the type-tag = “TY  - “ (skip the quotes) and must end with an
“ER  - “ (probably means ‘end of
reference’, does not have content). The other tags can be in any sequence. The
meaning of the tags can be looked up on the following website, which in any
case is most instructive to learn about RIS:

http://www.refman.com/support/risformat_intro.asp

So far
everything sounds quite easy. However, the import into Scratchpads is strongly
dependent on the first tag, the “Type” of the data set. If this type is set to
be BOOK it will ignore some fields, e.g. the “A2  - “ or “ED  - “ for
editor, and if it is set to JOUR = journal article, it will handle the A2-tag
like a ‘secondary author’ and not as an editor, and it will skip anything which
is tagged with “PB  - “ for publisher
and “CY  - “ for the publishers city.
For my purposes the division into three ‘types’ turned out to be sufficient, so
far. BOOK for those references which are whole books, CHAP (= book chapter)
which include editors (will take publishers data, too), and JOUR for journal
articles. In my bibliographic database the ‘type’ was not a standard data
field, thus, I had to set up a new data field and fill it with the three words
mentioned above for an automated import.

Your text
file exported from your source database should look something like that:

TY  - CHAP

T1  - Seed structure in Voyria primuloides Baker
(Gentianaceae): Taxonomic and ecological implications

A1  - Bouman, F.

A1  - Louis, A.

Y1  - 1989///

SP  - 261

EP  - 270

CY  - Amiens

PB  - Univ. Press. Picardie

A2  - Paré, J.

A2  - Bugnicourt, M.

A2  - Mortier, J.

A2  - Juguet, M.

A2  - Vignon, F.

A2  - Vignon, J.

T2  - Some Aspects and Actual Orientations in Plant
Embryology

ER  -

TY  - BOOK

T1  - Voyria

A1  - Aublet, J. B.

Y1  - 1775///

SP  - 208

EP  - 211

VL  - 1

CY  - London, Paris

PB  - P.-F. Didot jeune

T2  - Histoire des
plantes de la Guiane francoise

ER  -

TY  - JOUR

T1  - Characters of a new genus consisting of
two species of parasitic Gentianeae

A1  - Gray, A.

Y1  - 1871///

SP  - 22

EP  - 23

JF  - J. Linn. Soc.,
Bot.

VL  - 11

ER  -

You must
ensure to have the correct character encoding, which is ‘Unicode UTF8’. This is
particularly important for those using special characters like ü’s, ä’s and
ß’s. If the encoding is wrong every word which includes a special character
will be truncated starting from this character. Irina Brake pointed me to a
little software called ‘EditPad Lite’, which can convert e.g. western European
character set to UTF8. EditPad Lite is freely available at http://www.editpadpro.com/editpadlite.html.
Open your file in EditPad Lite, go to 'Convert', check 'Encode the original
data with another character set...', select 'Unicode, UTF-8, check the Preview,
click on 'OK' and save your file. Importing the converted text file results in
correct appearance of the special characters.

Now you are
ready to go to the import page of the bibliography module in your Scratchpad. I
strongly recommend to test the import in the sandbox first
(http://sandbox.scratchpads.eu/). And, initially pick only a few characteristic
data sets for a test. The system does allow the deletion of wrongly imported
references, but only 50 at once (if I remember right). This means, if you
import 800 references, and they are all wrong, you need to delete them in 16
steps (takes you about quarter of an hour).

The import
form is self explaining, choose your file, choose RIS as the format and click
‘import’. Next you can go to ‘bibliography’ and admire your work.

Don’t be
surprised when some of the content in your data sets does not show up in the
regular Scratchpad bibliography view. This view, as I understand it, is just a
teaser, not showing all data belonging to this data set. Click on the title of
the reference and you will see the missing information.

If you add
references, be aware of the fact that Scratchpads do not check for duplicates.
In order to avoid double or triple entries it might be a good idea to mark the
references in your source database which you already have exported.

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Scratchpads developed and conceived by (alphabetical): Ed Baker, Katherine Bouton Alice Heaton Dimitris Koureas, Laurence Livermore, Dave Roberts, Simon Rycroft, Ben Scott, Vince Smith