biblatex-unified
is an opinionated biblatex implementation of the Unified Stylesheet for Linguistics Journals. The stylesheet was developed by CELxJ, the Committee of Editors of Linguistics Journals.
The first implementation of the stylesheet for LaTeX was sp.bst
, developed for the house-style of the journal Semantics and Pragmatics (S&P). Bridget Samuels produced a revised version unified.bst
, which has largely disappeared from the internet.
The current project is a ground-up re-implementation of the unified stylesheet in modern biblatex. It has been used by S&P in production for several years.
Please file an issue at github to let us know of any problems you encounter and any recommendations for improvement.
The biblatex-unified
style consists of two files:
unified.bbx
-- for formatting the bibliography.unified.cbx
-- for formatting in-text citations in the style of S&P.- Since the Unified Stylesheet does not give any guidelines for in-text citations, this file is optional and users can choose other citation styles, such as the
authoryear-comp
citation style that comes with biblatex.
- Since the Unified Stylesheet does not give any guidelines for in-text citations, this file is optional and users can choose other citation styles, such as the
Compiling LaTeX documents with this style depends on a fairly recent TeX installation that includes biblatex 2.0+. It is tested only with the biber
backend. TexLive 2019 or later would be ideal.
Manual installation involves putting the two files unified.bbx
and unified.cbx
somewhere where your TeX system can find them. This could be local in the same directory as your tex source file, or in your TEXMF
"home" directory, or in the system TEXMF
directories.
To use the style in conjunction with S&P's sp.cls
,
simply add the biblatex
class option when importing sp.cls
:
\documentclass[biblatex]{sp}
If you are not using the S&P document class, you can still use this style by adding the following to your preamble (after \documentclass{...}
but before \begin{document}
):
\usepackage[backend=biber,
style=unified,
maxcitenames=3,
maxbibnames=99]{biblatex}
The unified citation style relies on hyperlinking between in-text citations and the bibliography. So, the hyperref
package is required. It is automatically loaded by sp.cls
but if you use a different document class and hyperref
is not loaded by that class, you need to add \usepackage{hyperref}
to your preamble as well.
If you were previously using natbib
, remove \usepackage{natbib}
and any accompanying \bibliographystyle{...}
and \bibpunct{...}
settings.
You might also find it helpful to add natbib
to the list of options (\usepackage[..., natbib]{biblatex}
), to load biblatex's natbib
compatibility module, which implements common natbib
commands like \citet
, \citep
, \citealt
, \citealp
, etc.
Whether you're using sp.cls
or a different document class, you'll need to change the usual BibTeX commands to biblatex, in two places:
- Replace the
\bibliography{your-bibfile}
line in the backmatter with\printbibliography
. - Add the following command to your preamble:
\addbibresource{your-bibfile.bib}
- NB: the
.bib
extension must be included (unlike BibTeX)
- NB: the
The full documentation and implementation notes can be found in biblatex-unified.pdf
. The PDF can be regenerated by typesetting the tex
source file with xelatex
. The tex
is actually itself generated from the underlying md
markdown file via pandoc
with the following incantation:
pandoc -f markdown -t latex biblatex-unified.md -s\
-o biblatex-unified.tex --highlight-style=kate
Copyright ©2022 Kai von Fintel.
This package is author-maintained. Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this software under the terms of the LaTeX Project Public License, version 1.3c.
This software is provided “as is,” without warranty of any kind, either expressed or implied, including, but not limited to, the implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose.