Often when writing, I need to define an acronym with a citation. For example:
One popular statistic is the Bayesian Information Criterion (BIC; Schwarz, 1978).
Unfortunately, I cannot get this to render correctly with citeproc. Here are a few iterations I have tried:
One popular statistic is the Bayesian Information Criterion [BIC; @schwarz-1978].
One popular statistic is the Bayesian Information Criterion [BIC; Schwarz (1978)].
One popular statistic is the Bayesian Information Criterion (BIC; Schwarz [-@bic])
One popular statistic is the Bayesian Information Criterion (BIC; Schwarz (1978)).
One popular statistic is the Bayesian Information Criterion [BIC, @bic]
One popular statistic is the Bayesian Information Criterion (BIC, Schwarz, 1978).
The last example is the closest, but I have to use a comma after the acronym instead of a semi-colon. I believe this is because the semi-colon is normally used to separate citation keys, and in this case the first item is an acronym, not a citation key. Is it possible to include an acronym with a citation in this way?
You could try escaping the semi-colon.
@article{bic,
title={Estimating the dimension of a model},
author={Schwarz, G.},
journal={The Annals of Statistics},
volume={6},
pages={461-464},
year={1978}
}
---
title: "Citation Acronym Example"
format: html
editor: visual
bibliography: bib.bib
---
# Desired Output
One popular statistic is the Bayesian Information Criterion (BIC; Schwarz, 1978).
# Escaping Backslash
One popular statistic is the Bayesian Information Criterion [BIC\; @bic]
Reprex files hosted with on GitHub