Denne side er i øjeblikket ikke tilgængelig på dansk, så den vises på engelsk. Vil du støtte os ved at hjælpe med at oversætte denne side? Oversæt denne side

Brug af natbib med BibTeX og Overleaf

The natbib package revolutionizes the standard \cite{*} command in LaTeX, when using BibTeX; providing a plethora of options for author-year schemes and displaying both textual and parenthetical information when using BibTeX. With this enhanced feature, you can easily customize your citations to suit any style preferences!

Har du brug for en enkel løsning til at håndtere dine BibTeX-poster? Udforsk CiteDrive!

  • Webbaseret, moderne referencehåndtering
  • Samarbejd og del med forskerkolleger
  • Integration med Overleaf
  • Omfattende BibTeX/BibLaTeX-understøttelse
  • Gem artikler og websteder direkte fra din browser
  • Søg efter nye artikler i en database med titusindvis af referencer
Prøv CiteDrive

Why use natbib?

natbib is a LaTeX package that allows you to use bibtex references more freely. It includes many citation commands and citation styles not found in standard bibtex, as well as the ability to customize existing citation styles to meet your needs; most notably, ab citation style requirements. One of the advantages of using natbib is the ability to generate author-year in a narrative or textual format. As an alternative, you could look into BibLaTeX, which includes all of these features on top of a much more feature-rich ecosystem and a very robust framework.

Getting started

Step 1: Create a bibliography

We recommend using CiteDrive to create the.bib-file because it assists you with formatting and saves articles from your browser directly to your bibliography. Among many other features, such as native BibTeX/BibLaTeX support, collaboration, error handling, and formatting, Overleaf allows you to keep your bibliographies in sync. Overleaf has more information.

Your bib-file, which you can also create manually if you don’t want to use CiteDrive, is a bibliographic reference file that LaTeX uses to format bibliographies and citations. Here’s an example of a straightforward bib-file:

@book{knuth1984texbook,
title = {The {\TeX}book},
author = {Donald E. Knuth},
year = 1984,
publisher = {Addison-Wesley}
}
@article{lamport1994latex,
title = {{LaTeX}: A Document Preparation System},
author = {Leslie Lamport},
year = 1994,
journal = {Addison-Wesley}
}
@inproceedings{gosling1995java,
title = {The Java Language Environment},
author = {James Gosling and Henry McGilton},
year = 1995,
booktitle = {Proceedings of the Sun Microsystems
Symposium on the Java Language},
publisher = {Sun Microsystems}
}

In this example, we have three references of different types (book, article, and inproceedings). Each reference is given a unique identifier (e.g. knuth1984texbook), which can be used to cite the reference in the LaTeX document.

Step 2: Create a TeX file

Here’s how to get everything together in our tex-file after we’ve created our.bib-file:

  1. Include the natbib package in your LaTeX document by adding the following line to the preamble:
\usepackage{natbib}
  1. Specify the citation style you want to use. For example, if you want to use the numeric style, add the following line:
\bibliographystyle{plainnat}
  1. We will include our previously generated bibliographic reference file, which is in.bib format, in your LaTeX document using the bibliography command — notice that we omit the file extension.
\bibliography{references}
  1. To cite a reference in the text, use the \cite or \citep command followed by the reference identifier:
As discussed in \cite{knuth1984texbook},
\TeX\ is a powerful typesetting system.
  1. Finally, include the following command to produce the bibliography at the end of your document:
\bibliography