\documentstyle[astron]{article} \title{Citation Examples} \author{S. J. Hogeveen} \begin{document} \maketitle \section*{Introduction} This file gives examples of citations as they can be made with the `{\tt astron}' bibliography style. To see how citations are made, you should look at the source text of this example: {\tt example.tex}. The bibliography database that goes with this example is: {\tt example.bib}. To get everything right, you must: 1.~run LaTeX on {\tt example.tex}, 2.~run BibTeX on {\tt example}, 3.~run LaTeX on {\tt example}, 4.~run LaTeX on {\tt example}. \section*{Citations} You can make full and short citations. A full citation is used if the author's name is not part of the running text, like in: `Due to general relativistic effects \cite{einstein}, light of a star will \ldots'. A short (year only) citation is used if the name of the author {\sl is\/} part of the running text, like in: `Einstein \cite*{einstein} has shown that light of a star that passes the sun will \ldots'. You can also (short) cite more references in one \verb|\cite| or \verb|\cite*| call, {\sl and\/} add an optional note, like in: `As many authors have shown \cite[but not necessarily in this order]{einstein,burkhardt,chandrasekhar,% pannekoek,pringle:ibs}. % Note that no white spaces are left between the citation labels and the commas. % If you do leave blanks, BibTeX will complain. Here is what happens if you cite two (or more) publications of the same author which appeared in the same year: \cite{kuip:ds1,kuip:ds2}. The \verb|\cite*| form of the same citations yields: Kuiper \cite*{kuip:ds1,kuip:ds2}. Finally, we invoke the entire database to be entered in the list of references with a \verb|\nocite{*}| call \nocite{*}. Note that the \verb|\nocite| command is not replaced by {\it key\/} information. \bibliography{mnemonic,example} \bibliographystyle{astron} \end{document}