I'm writng an article but natbib does not recognize my citations.
I have followed this process for the compilation :
- pdfLatex
- Bibtex
- pdfLatex
- pdfLatex
Also, I have tried to remove the .aux and .bbl files,
but I have observed no change.
\documentclass[10pt,a4paper]{article}
\usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
\usepackage{textcomp}
\usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
\usepackage{natbib}
\bibliographystyle{plainnat}
\usepackage[francais]{babel}
\begin{document}
the text beginning \citep{Benezit2013} the end of the text
\bibliography{bibliov2}
\end{document}
And, I think my file.bib is correct:
@phdthesis{Benezit2013,
author = {Benezit, M},
pages={76},
school={Ecole d'Agronomie Superieure Montpellier},
title={{Diagnostic agronomique des facteurs limitants du rendement du pois protagineux d'hiver et de printemps en Champagne Berrichonne}},
type={Master's thesis},
year={2013}
}
this is an extract of my file.log
No file testv4.bbl.
Package natbib Warning: There were undefined citations.
LaTeX Font Info: Font shape `T1/ua1/m/sl' in size <10> not available
(Font) Font shape `T1/ua1/m/it' tried instead on input line 28.
LaTeX Font Info: Font shape `T1/ua1/m/it' will be
(Font) scaled to size 9.49997pt on input line 28.
[1{C:/Users/stagex5/AppData/Local/MiKTeX/2.9/pdftex/config/pdftex.map}
I thank for your support in advance
.blgfile say? – Joseph Wright Apr 25 '16 at 16:36.blgand.logfiles (the.blgbeing more interesting probably). See also Question mark instead of citation number. On first glance your code seems fine, so the problem is likely somewhere else. Is your.bibfile calledbibliov2.biband resides in the same directory as your.texfile? – moewe Apr 25 '16 at 16:37.blgfile? If you don't get any you either didn't run BibTeX or something went seriously wrong when you tried to. – moewe Apr 25 '16 at 16:50file.log(i assume that'stestv4.log). the.logfile is not the same as the.blgfile. the.blgfile is the log from the bibtex run, and it looks quite different from what you show. look again for that file, and it should tell you what the problem is. – barbara beeton Apr 25 '16 at 18:00