Indicated in the table are the parameter values that are used when they are not entered. It can be negative to indicate last authors. The first number after an author specifier, the number of authors, should be a single digit. So you're probably not gonna find anything that's much better. In the table above, green characters after the specifiers indicate the optional parameters. Well, in order to get it right (i.e., to match braces), you'd need a context-senstitive language, which regular expressions aren't. It's a bit janky, anyone have a more elegant regular expression? > Finding the closing brace } of the annote field is tough, because the field itself frequently contained line-ending braces (where the papers bibtex exporter is replacing diacritic characters with bibtex codes), so I had to scan for either a line ending with "}," (if annote isn't the final field) or the final double brace "}\r}" (if annote is the last field), and then replace the final brace that this lops off (this means that if annote isn't the final field, you get a superfluous brace). > btw, slightly off-topic, this is the grep find/replace I used to kill annote: 2014 om 16:00 heeft Oliver D het volgende geschreven: : Jaeger says that Livy 'places Marcellus in a setting comprised of many historical and literary layers' p. Marcellus had captured Syracuse and Verres. Inside the boundaries of Syracuse, Livy is commonly taken to have been invoking Cicero's *In Verrem*, and the manner in which Cicero had invoked Marcellus in his invective against Verres. As Jaegar and others have shown, outside the city, up to and including its peripheral walls, as well as Polybius, a primary intertext is Thucydides' account of the Athenian invasion of Sicily and the disaster of Epipolae. Livy's depiction of the capture of Syracuse by Marcellus is a literary site of intertextual abundance.
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