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NAME

       ltx2crossrefxml.pl - create XML files for submitting to crossref.org

SYNOPSIS

       ltx2crossrefxml [-c config_file]  [-o output_file] [-input-is-xml]
                       latex_file1 latex_file2 ...

OPTIONS

       -c config_file
           Configuration file.  If this file is absent, defaults are used.  See below for its format.

       -o output_file
           Output file.  If this option is not used, the XML is output to stdout.

       -rpi-is-xml
           Do not transform author and title input strings, assume they are valid XML.

       The usual "--help" and "--version" options are also supported. Options can begin with either "-" or "--",
       and ordered arbitrarily.

DESCRIPTION

       For  each  given  latex_file,  this  script  reads  ".rpi"  and  (if they exist) ".bbl" files and outputs
       corresponding XML that can be uploaded to Crossref (<https://crossref.org>). Any extension of  latex_file
       is ignored, and latex_file itself is not read (and need not even exist).

       Each  ".rpi"  file  specifies  the  metadata  for  a  single  article  to  be  uploaded  to  Crossref  (a
       "journal_article" element in their  schema);  an  example  is  below.  These  files  are  output  by  the
       "resphilosophica"  package  (<https://ctan.org/pkg/resphilosophica>), but (as always) can also be created
       by hand or by whatever other method you implement.

       Any ".bbl" files present are used for the citation information in  the  output  XML.  See  the  CITATIONS
       section below.

       Unless  "--rpi-is-xml"  is  specified,  for  all  text  (authors, title, citations), standard TeX control
       sequences  are   replaced   with   plain   text   or   UTF-8   or   eliminated,   as   appropriate.   The
       "LaTeX::ToUnicode::convert" routine is used for this (<https://ctan.org/pkg/bibtexperllibs>).  Tricky TeX
       control sequences will almost surely not be handled correctly. If "--rpi-is-xml" is given, the author and
       title  strings  from  the  rpi  files are output as-is, assuming they are valid XML; no checking is done.
       Citation text from ".bbl" files is always converted from LaTeX to plain text.

       This script just writes an XML file. It's up to you  to  actually  do  the  uploading  to  Crossref;  for
       example,       you       can       use       their       Java       tool       "crossref-upload-tool.jar"
       (<https://www.crossref.org/education/member-setup/direct-deposit-xml/https-post>).  For the definition of
       their  schema,  see  <https://data.crossref.org/reports/help/schema_doc/4.4.2/index.html>  (this  is  the
       schema version currently followed by this script).

CONFIGURATION FILE FORMAT

       The  configuration  file  is read as Perl code. Thus, comment lines starting with "#" and blank lines are
       ignored. The other lines are typically assignments in the form (spaces are optional):

           $variable = value ;

       Usually the value is a "string" enclosed in ASCII  double-quote  or  single-quote  characters,  per  Perl
       syntax.  The  idea  is  to  specify the user-specific and journal-specific values needed for the Crossref
       upload. The variables which are used are these:

           $depositorName = "Depositor Name";
           $depositorEmail = 'depositor@example.org';
           $registrant = 'Registrant';  # organization name
           $fullTitle = "FULL TITLE";   # journal name
           $issn = "1234-5678";         # required
           $abbrevTitle = "ABBR. TTL."; # optional
           $coden = "CODEN";            # optional

       For a given run, all ".rpi" data read is assumed to belong to  the  journal  that  is  specified  in  the
       configuration  file.  More  precisely, the configuration data is written as a "journal_metadata" element,
       with given "full_title",  "issn",  etc.,  and  then  each  ".rpi"  is  written  as  "journal_issue"  plus
       "journal_article" elements.

       The  configuration  file  can  also  define  one  Perl function: "LaTeX_ToUnicode_convert_hook". If it is
       defined, it is called at the beginning of the procedure that converts LaTeX text  to  Unicode,  which  is
       done      with     the     LaTeX::ToUnicode     module,     from     the     "bibtexperllibs"     package
       (<https://ctan.org/pkg/bibtexperllibs>). The function must accept one string (the LaTeX text), and return
       one string (presumably the transformed string). The standard conversions are then applied to the returned
       string, so the configured function need only handle special cases, such as control  sequences  particular
       to the journal at hand.

RPI FILE FORMAT

       Here's  the  (relevant  part  of  the)  ".rpi"  file  corresponding  to the "rpsample.tex" example in the
       "resphilosophica" package (<https://ctan.org/pkg/resphilosophica>):

         %authors=Boris Veytsman\and A. U. Th{\o }r\and C. O. R\"espondent
         %title=A Sample Paper:\\ \emph  {A Template}
         %year=2012
         %volume=90
         %issue=1--2
         %startpage=1
         %endpage=1
         %doi=10.11612/resphil.A31245
         %paperUrl=http://borisv.lk.net/paper12
         %publicationType=full_text

       Other lines, some not beginning with %, are ignored (and not shown).  For more details on processing, see
       the code.

       The %paperUrl value is what will be associated with the given %doi (output as  the  "resource"  element).
       Crossref  strongly  recommends  that  the url be for a so-called landing page, and not directly for a pdf
       (<https://www.crossref.org/education/member-setup/creating-a-landing-page/>).  Special case: if  the  url
       is  not  specified, and the journal is Res Philosophica, a special-purpose search url using pdcnet.org is
       returned.  Any other journal must always specify this.

       The %authors field is split at  "\and"  (ignoring  whitespace  before  and  after),  and  output  as  the
       "contributors"  element,  using  "sequence="first"" for the first listed, "sequence="additional"" for the
       remainder.

       If the %publicationType is not specified, it defaults to "full_text", since that  has  historically  been
       the  case;  "full_text" can also be given explicitly. The other values allowed by the Crossref schema are
       "abstract_only" and "bibliographic_record". Finally, if  the  value  is  "omit",  the  "publication_type"
       attribute is omitted entirely from the given "journal_article" element.

       Each  ".rpi"  must  contain  information for only one article, but multiple files can be read in a single
       run. It would not be difficult to support multiple articles  in  a  single  ".rpi"  file,  but  it  makes
       debugging and error correction easier when each uploaded XML contains a single article.

   MORE ABOUT AUTHOR NAMES
       The three formats for names recognized are (not coincidentally) the same as BibTeX:

          First von Last
          von Last, First
          von Last, Jr., First

       The  forms  can  be freely intermixed within a single %authors line, separated with "\and" (including the
       backslash). Commas as name separators are not supported, unlike BibTeX.

       In short, you may almost always use the first form; you shouldn't if either there's a  Jr  part,  or  the
       Last part has multiple tokens but there's no von part. See the "btxdoc" (``BibTeXing'' by Oren Patashnik)
       document for details.

       In  the  %authors  line  of  a  ".rpi"  file,  some secondary directives are recognized, indicated by "|"
       characters. Easiest to explain with an example:

         %authors=|organization|\LaTeX\ Project Team \and Alex Brown|orcid=123

       Thus: 1) if "|organization|"  is  specified,  the  author  name  will  be  output  as  an  "organization"
       contributor, instead of the usual "person_name", as the Crossref schema requires.

       2) If "|orcid=value|" is specified, the value is output as an "ORCID" element for that "person_name".

       These  two  directives,  "|organization"|  and  "|orcid|"  are mutually exclusive, because that's how the
       Crossref schema defines them. The "=" sign after "orcid" is required, while all spaces after the  "orcid"
       keyword  are ignored. Other than that, the ORCID value is output literally. (E.g., the ORCID value of 123
       above is clearly invalid, but it would be output anyway, with no warning.)

       Extra "|" characters, at the beginning or end of the entire %authors string, or doubled  in  the  middle,
       are accepted and ignored. Whitespace is ignored around all "|" characters.

CITATIONS

       Each  ".bbl"  file  corresponding  to  an  input ".rpi" file is read and used to output a "citation_list"
       element for that "journal_article" in the output XML. If no ".bbl" file exists for  a  given  ".rpi",  no
       "citation_list" is output for that article.

       The  ".bbl" processing is rudimentary: only so-called "unstructured_citation" references are produced for
       Crossref, that is, the contents of the citation (each paragraph in the ".bbl") is dumped as a single flat
       string without markup.

       Bibliography text is unconditionally converted from TeX to XML, via the method described above. It is not
       unusual for the conversion to be incomplete or incorrect.  It is up to you to check for  this;  e.g.,  if
       any backslashes remain in the output, it is most likely an error.

       Furthermore,  it  is  assumed  that the ".bbl" file contains a sequence of references, each starting with
       "\bibitem{KEY}" (which itself must be at the beginning of a line, preceded only by whitespace),  and  the
       whole  bibliography  ending  with  "\end{thebibliography}"  (similarly  at  the  beginning  of a line). A
       bibliography not following this format will not produce useful results. Bibliographies can be created  by
       hand, or with BibTeX, or any other method.

       The  "key"  attribute  for the "citation" element is taken as the KEY argument to the "\bibitem" command.
       The sequential number of the citation (1, 2, ...) is appended. The argument to "\bibitem"  can  be  empty
       ("\bibitem{}",  and  the  sequence  number  will  be used on its own.  Although TeX will not handle empty
       "\bibitem" keys, it can be convenient when creating a ".bbl" purely for Crossref.

       The ".rpi" file is also checked for the bibliography information, in this same format.

       Feature request:  if  anyone  is  interested  in  figuring  out  how  to  generate  structured  citations
       (<https://data.crossref.org/reports/help/schema_doc/5.3.1/schema_5_3_1.html#citation>)  instead  of these
       flat text dumps, that would be great. Except the schema seems to support  much  less  than  described  at
       <https://www.crossref.org/documentation/principles-practices/best-practices/bibliographic/>?  Anyway, the
       most  viable  approach  is probably to change tugboat.bst to output no-op TeX commands like \tubibauthor,
       \tubibtitle, etc. (a la biblatex), and use those commands to discern the various crossref  field  values.
       We can't start from the .bib because then we'd have to reimplement Bib(La)TeX.

EXAMPLES

         ltx2crossrefxml.pl ../paper1/paper1.tex ../paper2/paper2.tex \
                             -o result.xml

         ltx2crossrefxml.pl -c myconfig.cfg paper.tex -o paper.xml

AUTHOR

       Boris Veytsman <https://github.com/borisveytsman/crossrefware>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       Copyright (C) 2012-2024  Boris Veytsman

       This  is  free  software.   You  may  redistribute copies of it under the terms of the GNU General Public
       License (any version) <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>.  There  is  NO  WARRANTY,  to  the  extent
       permitted by law.

                                                   2024-02-03                                 ltx2crossrefxml(1)