Pubs brings your bibliography to the command line.
Pubs organizes your scientific papers together with their bibliographic data and provides command line access to basic and advanced manipulation of your library.
Pubs is built with the following principles in mind:
- all papers are referenced using unique citation keys,
- bibliographic data—bibtex information—is kept separated from metadata such as links to pdf or tags.
- everything is stored in plain text so it can be manually edited or version controlled.
Pubs is currently being maintained, rather than developed aggressively. We add small features, correct bugs, but have no short-term plans to add major features to it. Pubs does most of what it is supposed to do: help us do science, so now we are mostly doing that.
Notice: pubs is relatively stable but comes with no warranty; do keep backups of your data. Notice: pubs currently works with Python 2.7, but support is being dropped (tests are not run anymore).
You can install the latest stable version of pubs
through Pypi, with:
pip install pubs
Alternatively, you can:
-
install the latest development version with pip:
pip install --upgrade git+https://github.com/pubs/pubs
-
clone the repository and install it manually:
git clone https://github.com/pubs/pubs cd pubs python setup.py install [--user]
Arch Linux users can also use the pubs-git AUR package.
Create your library (by default, goes to ~/.pubs/
).
pubs init
Import existing data from bibtex (pubs will try to automatically copy documents defined as 'file' in bibtex):
pubs import path/to/collection.bib
or for a .bib file containing a single reference:
pubs add reference.bib -d article.pdf
pubs can also automatically retrieve the bibtex from a doi:
pubs add -D 10.1007/s00422-012-0514-6 -d article.pdf
or an ISBN (dashes are ignored):
pubs add -I 978-0822324669 -d article.pdf
or an arXiv id (automatically downloading arXiv article is in the works):
pubs add -X math/9501234 -d article.pdf
If you use latex, you can automatize references, by running pubs export > references.bib
each time you update your library, which also fits well as a makefile
rule.
This ensures that your reference file is always up-to-date; you can cite a paper in your manuscript a soon as you add it in pubs. This means that if you have, for instance, a DOI on a webpage, you only need to do:
pubs add -D 10.1007/s00422-012-0514-6
and then add \cite{Loeb_2012}
in your manuscript. After exporting the bibliography, the citation will correctly appear in your compiled pdf.
You can attach a document to a reference:
pubs doc add Loeb2012_downloaded.pdf Loeb_2012
And open your documents automatically from the command line:
pubs doc open Loeb_2012
pubs doc open --with lp Loeb_2012 # Opens the document with `lp` to actually print it.
Pubs comes with a git plugin that automatically commits your changes. You only need to activate it in your configuration:
[plugins]
active = git,
You can then also conveniently interact with the git repository by using pubs git <regular git commands>
.
You may want to have different pubs repositories, for different projects. To create an alternate repository:
pubs --config /path/to/config init --pubsdir /path/to/desired_repository_directory
The configuration file and repository will be automatically created.
Then you can add papers to the new repository:
pubs --config /path/to/config add -D 10.1007/s00422-012-0514-6
A useful thing might be to define an alias in your shell:
alias pubs2="pubs --config /path/to/config"
and then use pubs2
as you would use pubs
directly. Note that you cannot use the alias plugin below to do this.
Pubs is designed to interact well with your command line tool chain.
You can add custom commands to pubs by defining aliases in your configuration file (make sure that the alias plugin is activated in your configuration by using pubs conf
).
[[alias]]
evince = open --with evince
count = !pubs list -k "$@" | wc -l
The first command defines a new subcommand: pubs open --with evince
will be executed when pubs evince
is typed.
The second starts with a bang: !
, and is treated as a shell command. If other arguments are provided they are passed to the shell command as in a script. In the example above the count
alias can take arguments that are be passed to the pubs list -k
command, hence enabling filters like pubs count year:2012
.
For autocompletion to work, you need the argcomplete Python package, and Bash 4.2 or newer. For activating bash or tsch completion, consult the argcomplete documentation.
For zsh completion, the global activation is not supported but bash completion compatibility can be used for pubs. For that, add the following to your .zshrc
:
# Enable and load bashcompinit
autoload -Uz compinit bashcompinit
compinit
bashcompinit
# Argcomplete explicit registration for pubs
eval "$(register-python-argcomplete pubs)"
You can access the self-documented configuration by using pubs conf
, and all the commands' help is available with the --help
option. Did not find an answer to your question? Drop us an issue. We may not answer right away (science comes first!) but we'll eventually look into it.