I have played a little with LaTeX lately and I really like it, it makes the document look top professional and makes structuring a report easy.
I am currently using it for a big assignment with lots of references, but I can't get natbib to work as I want.
What it does now is to sort by appearance which works, but I would like to have it categorized as well. I really hope this is possible, as it is a requirement.
As requested, I will try to provide a MWE
\documentclass[12pt,a4paper,danish,oneside,openany]{memoir}
\usepackage[round]{natbib}
\usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
\usepackage[danish]{babel} % danske overskrifter
\usepackage[T1]{fontenc} % fonte (output)
\usepackage{lmodern} % vektor fonte
\begin{document}
% include abstract
\tableofcontents*
% include other pages
\bibliography{./biblio/ipr}
\bibliographystyle{unsrt}
% include appendix
\end{document}
and a page could be
\section{Don't be evil}
This is the first paragraph from a website.\footnote{\cite{pnp}}
This is a second paragraph with text from a book.\footnote{\cite[Part 3, chap. 2]{itp-2}}
In the footnote it looks like
1[1]
2[2, Part 3, chap. 2]
pnp is a website and itp-2 is a book, defined as @misc and @book in my .bib file.
@book{itp-2,
Author = {Steven Levy},
Edition = {1},
Publisher = {Simon \& Schuster},
Title = {In The Plex},
Year = {2011}
}
@misc{pnp,
author = {Laszlo Bock},
title = {{Passion, Not Perks}},
howpublished = "\url{http://www.thinkwithgoogle.com/quarterly/people/laszlo-bock-people-ops.html}",
year = {2011},
note = "Bes{\o}gt den 19/12/2012"
}
Is it possible to sort the book first, even though the website appears first?
This is an example of how I want it to order my references.
Books
[4] Steven Levy. In The Plex. Simon & Schuster, 1 edition, 2011.Web Articles
[1] Mette Morsing. Corporate Branding Basics. http: //www.kommunikationsforum.dk/artikler/ corporate-branding-basics/, 2011. Besøgt den 17/12/2012.[3] Vlad Savov. The benefits of working at Google continue af- ter death. http://www.theverge.com/2012/8/10/3232810/ google-employees-life-insurance, 2012.
Websites
[2] Ebbe Berg. Branding. http://www.berg-marketing.dk/ branding.htm, 2012.
The numbers is the order of appearance in the text, but it is sorted after books first, then web articles and at last websites. To define what is a web article and what is a website, I believe it is possible to choose an appropriate style?
I am not very good at StackExchange layout, so I hope someone can change it to look more like a real LaTeX example. Anyway, I hope this is possible and if you know how to, it would be a great help!
biblatexor not, how you call your bibliography etc. This all helps us to help you ... – Mensch Dec 20 '12 at 01:34multibbl,multibib, andsplitbibpackages. Separately, since you're usingnatbib, you may want to useunsrtnatrather thanunsrtas your bibliography style. – Mico Dec 20 '12 at 13:13