Yves,
Thanks for your help. I've downloaded the file in the folder where the
styles are. However, I cannot see from Word 2007. Should I substitute the APA
existing code for your code? Should I keep the name APA? Can I add a new
style like APA2 with your code so I don't loose the original APA style? How
should I go about?
The style is listed in Word 2007 as "APA - Square Brackets - One
Author". Note that after copying the style into the directory where
the other styles are, you need to restart Word to see the style listed
in Word. Word only loads the stylenames once during start up. This
will not influence the original APA style. If you wish to create a
derived style from for example APA, I suggest you first create a copy,
and then change the way the style of the copy is described in Word
2007 as described in
http://www.codeplex.com/bibliography/Wiki/View.aspx?title=FAQ#Q8
Interestingly, By the time I got your response, I had already pursuaded my
advisor for letting me use parenthesis instead of square brackets. But I
still need et al. By the way, et al. is always in italics. Could you please
upload two files with these changes. I mean, the first one: () and et.al. in
(italic) and Second [] and et.al.(in italic).
To change the open bracket, look for a piece in the code looking like
this:
<!--<xsl:call-template name="templ_prop_OpenBracket"/>-->
<xsl:text>[</xsl:text>
Just change the [ into ( if you want round brackets. Similar for close
brackets look for:
<!--<xsl:call-template name="templ_prop_CloseBracket"/>-->
<xsl:text>]</xsl:text>
and change accordingly.
Using italics inside an in-text citation is currently not possible to
the best of my knowledge. This is because the citation inherits the
paragraph (or character) style of the paragraph it belongs to.
(As a personal remark: using meaningless italics throughout a
paragraph actually has a negative influence on its readability. People
quickly scanning through a text tend to focus on differently formatted
parts. I doubt anyone would want to focus on 'et al'.)