citeproc-java is a Citation Style Language (CSL) processor for Java.
It interprets CSL styles and generates citations and bibliographies.
CSLItemData item = new CSLItemDataBuilder()
.type(CSLType.ARTICLE_JOURNAL)
.title("Protein measurement with the Folin phenol reagent")
.author(
new CSLNameBuilder().given("Oliver H.").family("Lowry").build(),
new CSLNameBuilder().given("Nira J.").family("Rosebrough").build(),
new CSLNameBuilder().given("A. Lewis").family("Farr").build(),
new CSLNameBuilder().given("Rose J.").family("Randall").build()
)
.issued(1951)
.containerTitle("The Journal of biological chemistry")
.volume(193)
.issue(1)
.page(265, 275)
.build();
String bibl = CSL.makeAdhocBibliography("apa", item).makeString();
Output:
<div class="csl-bib-body">
<div class="csl-entry">Lowry, O. H., Rosebrough, N. J., Farr, A. L., & Randall, R. J. (1951). Protein measurement with the Folin phenol reagent. <span style="font-style: italic">The Journal of Biological Chemistry</span>, <span style="font-style: italic">193</span>(1), 265–275.</div>
</div>
Rendered:
Lowry, O. H., Rosebrough, N. J., Farr, A. L., & Randall, R. J. (1951). Protein measurement with the Folin phenol reagent. The Journal of Biological Chemistry, 193(1), 265–275. |
- Generates citations and bibliographies
- Supports 10000+ citation styles and various locales
- Different output formats such as
html
,text
,asciidoc
, andfo
- Importers for BibTeX, EndNote, and RIS
- Command-line tool to execute the library without setting up a development environment
To use citeproc-java, you need three things: the library itself, the CSL styles, and the CSL locales. The styles and locales are distributed separately, because they are updated more frequently than citeproc-java.
Here's the configuration for Gradle:
dependencies {
implementation 'de.undercouch:citeproc-java:3.1.0'
implementation 'org.citationstyles:styles:24.3'
implementation 'org.citationstyles:locales:24.3'
}
And here's the configuration for Maven:
<dependencies>
<dependency>
<groupId>de.undercouch</groupId>
<artifactId>citeproc-java</artifactId>
<version>3.1.0</version>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>org.citationstyles</groupId>
<artifactId>styles</artifactId>
<version>24.3</version>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>org.citationstyles</groupId>
<artifactId>locales</artifactId>
<version>24.3</version>
</dependency>
</dependencies>
In the quick start example above, you have seen how to create bibliographies with CSL.makeAdhocBibliography()
. This method provides a simple interface that covers many use cases. The following usage instructions give you with much more control.
First, create an ItemDataProvider
that provides citation item data to the CSL processor. You can either implement this interface yourself or use one of the default implementations such as the ListItemDataProvider
:
ListItemDataProvider lidp = new ListItemDataProvider(
new CSLItemDataBuilder()
.id("Smith2013")
.type(CSLType.ARTICLE_JOURNAL)
.title("Some journal article")
.author("John", "Smith")
.issued(2013)
.containerTitle("Some journal")
.build(),
new CSLItemDataBuilder()
.id("Johnson2024")
.type(CSLType.BOOK)
.title("My turbulent life")
.author("Peter", "Johnson")
.issued(2024)
.build()
);
Note how the item data is created through a builder DSL. In citeproc-java you can use builders for all model objects.
If you like, you can also load the citation item data from a file. For example, the BibTeXItemDataProvider
can import BibTeX databases. See the section on importers below.
After having created an ItemDataProvider
, you can instantiate the CSL processor:
CSL citeproc = new CSL(lidp, "apa");
citeproc.setOutputFormat("text");
You have to provide the item data provider and a CSL style (select one of the 10,000+ styles bundled in the org.citationstyles:styles
dependency). The processor tries to load the style from the classpath, but you may also pass your own style as a serialized CSL string to the constructor.
To create a bibliography that contains a set of citation items, call the registerCitationItems(String...)
method and introduce the item IDs to the processor:
citeproc.registerCitationItems("Smith2013", "Johnson2024");
The processor will request the corresponding citation item data from the provided ItemDataProvider
.
Alternatively, you can call makeCitation(String)
to generate citation strings that you can insert into your document.
List<Citation> s1 = citeproc.makeCitation("Smith2013");
System.out.println(s1.get(0).getText());
//=> (Smith, 2013) (for the "apa" style configured above)
List<Citation> s2 = citeproc.makeCitation("Johnson2024");
System.out.println(s2.get(0).getText());
//=> (Johnson, 2024)
The processor saves each ID, so you can generate a bibliography that contains all citations you used in your document.
Bibliography bibl = citeproc.makeBibliography();
for (String entry : bibl.getEntries()) {
System.out.println(entry);
}
//=> Johnson, P. (2024). My turbulent life.
// Smith, J. (2013). Some journal article. Some Journal.
citeproc-java supports several input file formats. This allows you to create citations and bibliographies from your existing citation databases.
For example, you can load a BibTeX file as follows:
BibTeXDatabase db = new BibTeXConverter().loadDatabase(
Files.newInputStream(Paths.get("mydb.bib")));
After that, you can create an ItemDataProvider
and pass it to the CSL processor.
BibTeXItemDataProvider provider = new BibTeXItemDataProvider();
provider.addDatabase(db);
CSL citeproc = new CSL(provider, "apa");
Now, you can use the CSL processor as described above.
Besides BibTeXItemDataProvider
, there is EndNoteItemDataProvider
and RISItemDataProvider
, which allow you to read EndNote and RIS files respectively.
For convenience, you can use BibliographyFileReader
, which automatically detects the file format and returns a corresponding ItemDataProvider
:
BibliographyFileReader bfr = new BibliographyFileReader();
ItemDataProvider idp = bfr.readBibliographyFile(new File("mydb.bib"));
CSL citeproc = new CSL(idp, "apa");
citeproc-java supports several output formats. The most common ones are html
and text
, but you can also use asciidoc
and fo
.
Call the CSL processor’s setOutputFormat(String)
method to set the desired format.
citeproc.setOutputFormat("html");
citeproc-java binaries are available from the GitHub releases page. On macOS, you can install the command line tool with Homebrew.
brew tap michel-kraemer/citeproc-java
brew install citeproc-java
With the command-line tool, can use citeproc-java without setting up a full development environment. The tool allows you to easily create citations and bibliographies. In particular, it comes in handy if ...
- you are an author using CSL and you want a quick way to preview your citations or bibliographies, or if
- you are a CSL style author and want to test your style files.
The tool can render bibliographies and citations, convert a database (e.g. BibTeX, EndNote, or RIS file) to a CSL json document, or list citation IDs from a database. There even is an interactive shell.
To get the tool's help, call the following command:
citeproc-java --help
If you want to hack on citeproc-java (which would be much appreciated, by the way), clone the repository and execute the following command to compile the library and to run the unit tests:
./gradlew test
The script automatically downloads the correct Gradle version, so you won’t have to do anything else. If everything runs successfully, you can create a .jar
library:
./gradlew jar
The library will be located under the citeproc-java/build/libs
directory.
To install the library in your local Maven repository execute the following command:
./gradlew publishToMavenLocal
If you want to build the command line tool run the following command:
./gradlew installDist
The command line tool will be installed to citeproc-java-tool/build/install/citeproc-java-tool
.
The library uses citeproc-js for testing (i.e. in unit tests to compare its own output to what citeproc-js renders). citeproc-js has been created by Frank G. Bennett and is licensed under the Common Public Attribution License Version 1.0.
The BibTeX name parser's grammar is based on the one found in the bibtex-ruby. The original grammar is licensed under GPL v3. It has been converted to ANTLR and is released here under the Apache License 2.0 by permission of the original author Sylvester Keil.
The BibTeX to CSL converter is based on the mapping used in Docear as presented by Joeran Beel.
Docear is released under the GPLv2 but its code may also be reused in projects licensed under Apache License 2.0. The mapping is released here under the Apache License 2.0 by permission of Joeran Beel, Docear.
The algorithm that produces typographically correct quotation marks and apostrophes is based on smartquotes.js written by Kelly Martin and released under the MIT license. The code has been translated to Java and improved to support more edge cases as well as multiple languages.
citeproc-java is able to sort citations in a natural, language-sensitive way.
The implementation of this behaviour is loosely based on the Alphanum algorithm
by Dave Koelle and the
Java implementation
released under the MIT license. However, it has been extended to use a
java.text.Collator
for locale-sensitive comparison, and it is also able to
compare arbitrarily large numbers.
The implementation of the algorithm that converts strings to title case is based on the JavaScript library to-title-case by David Gouch released under the MIT license. The code has been translated to Java and was slightly modified to produce strings that adhere to the CSL specification.
citeproc-java is licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0.
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.