![]() The judgment-heuristics school of thought has stressed the negative im. So, I’d like to suggest, as a minimum, to start wrapping the references section (excluding its header) in a latex environment, e.g. filling an indented surface, but a point object tracing a path across the surface. It seems difficult to simplify this setup since pandoc’s latex output currently does not provide hooks of any kind in connection with the references section, e.g., a latex enviroment analogous to in html output. (So far, I have been using this filter for tweaking the latex output by wrapping the references section in a references latex list environment, complemented by a suitable definition of the environment in the latex template.) On the Indentation Options box, click the Special Indent drop-down menu and choose Hanging. While your text is selected, in Google Docs’ menu bar, click Format > Align & Indent > Indentation Options. In the document, select the text to which you want to apply hanging indent options. While it is almost trivial to obtain hanging indentation in the references section in html (via css), there is no easy way to do this if the output format is latex or pdf. To start, open your document on Google Docs. ![]() Still the citation in Mellel is always the full version. In bookends I selected my output style and formated the citation style with the format manager. This is a big p Bookends is robust, and has indeed world-class support. The word processor in Bookends preferences is switched to Mellel and in Mellels Preferences the bibliography is switched to bookends. Currently, pandoc-citeproc ignores the hanging-indent="true" flag in. Like Papers, Bookends 13.2 and above is nicely scriptable. ![]()
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