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What is it?

The Simple Cite Confluence app brings citation functionality to Confluence. The functionality can be compared to the citation you know from Wikipedia. You can define your own custom cites, refer to BibTeX cites included in an bib-file (as attachment or by URL) or refer to DOIs.

The Simple Cite for Cloud change log contains all relevant updates in the recent past.

Legal and policy documents

The following legal documents apply for all of our apps:

Configuration

Simple Cite does not need any system- or space-wide configuration.

How it works

Simple Cite provides a set of user macros. The main ones are shown in the image below.

In most uses you need a couple of cites from line 1 and 2 from the image below and a cite summary.

This image shows the relationship again:

The different macros explained

Image

Macro name(s)

What it does

Single cite

A single cite (e.g. the reference to a book) is reflected by that macro. It consists out of a unique ID an optional page range and the reference itself - like: ID: Miller92, pages: 1-10, reference: Miller, "The art of citation", London 1992. Unique ID and page range are parameters of the macro which you have to enter when you add the macro. The reference has to be specified in the macro body (the white part of the box) what allows you to add formatting, links etc.

This macro was one of the main macros used before Atlassian introduced their new editor. Since then the macro suffers from the inline-rendering issue which is (up to now) not fixed by Atlassian. Please avoid using this macro unless you want to define a citation bucket somewhere.

Single cite plain

This macro offers the same functionality as the one above but only allows to define plain text cites without any formatting. This macro was introduced to mitigate the inline-rendering issue mentioned above.

You can add internal and external links to a plain cite.

Single cite short

Once a cite has been fully qualified by the single cite macro it is possible to use that macro to refer to the same reference again just using the unique ID and the page-range if needed.

DOI Cite

With the DOI cite macro you can refer to a DOI (Digital Object Identifier) which automatically gets rendered in the specified CSL style (e.g. apa).

The DOI 10.1109/VETECS.2010.5493979 requested in apa CSL style results in:

Kusume, K., Dietl, G., Abe, T., Taoka, H., & Nagata, S. (2010). System Level Performance of Downlink MU-MIMO Transmission for 3GPP LTE-Advanced. 2010 IEEE 71st Vehicular Technology Conference. doi:10.1109/vetecs.2010.5493979

BibTeX File Cite

BibTeX Direct Cite

The BibTeX File Cite macro allows you to reference to a cite provided in a BibTeX file (*.bib). Simply specify the bib-file and provide the cite ID from the bib-file. You also have to define the CSL style (e.g. apa).

(info) You can select bib-files attached to any Confluence page or specify an URL. When using an URL please note that only https-connections are accepted.

The BibTeX Direct Cite macro allows you to enter a single BibTeX cite directly.

Single cite import

You may use this macro to refer to a cite you defined on another Confluence page. Simply select the page you want to import the cite from and specify the ID of the cite.

Cite Summary

At the end of a page containing cites you will probably want to have a reference section which shows you all the references you made in the article. This is achieved by the Cite Summary Macro.

Space cite summary

The space cite summary macro allows you to specify a list of spaces (comma-separated list of space keys) and then shows all cites used in these spaces. The table generated allows to get an overview of e.g. which pages refer to a certain reference like a standard.

BibTeX listing

Show a listing of all BibTeX cites of the given bib-file.

(info) Please note that the BibTeX listing is rendered when you insert it. Subsequent changes of the bib file to not change the listing unless you update the macro-

Tips for creating a bibliography

In many use cases it can be useful to create one or multiple bibliographies which define all cites/citations centrally and other pages only refer to a cite out of the bibliographies.

In Simple cite you have multiple options to implement a bibliography.

Option 1: Define your bibliography on a Confluence page and use Single Cite Import

You can use any of the cite macros explained above to define all the citations belonging to your bibliography on a single page, use the bibliography output to get a convenient view on them and then use the Single Cite Import macro on the other pages.

Option 2: Use a BibTeX file

A BibTeX file (stored on Confluence or elsewhere) can host your entire bibliography. Just use the BibTeX File Cite to insert a cite on a page using this BibTeX file.

💡 In order to get a better overview of what is inside the BibTeX file you can use BibTeX listing macro.

Option 3: Coming soon

Stay tuned 🔜

Frequent support cases

Observation/Question

Explanation/Answer

PDF/Word export times out

In case you have many cites (> 100) on a page it might happen that the generation of a PDF or Word document times out. The reason is that Confluence Cloud requests each cite in a row not parallel. There is currently no mitigation.

Migration from Server or Data Center

Please refer to migration guide for further details.

We continuously amend this list.

Known limitations

  • The Single Cite macro is suffering from the inline-rendering issue introduced by Atlassian with the release of the new editor

Getting support

Please use our ticketing system to create a support ticket regardless whether you found a bug, have a feature request or questions.

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