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Hi Marcus!
@string expressions are not currently supported, but I think it would be a valuable feature to add. I'll investigate how much work that would be.
See below.
Carol, I'm no longer sure what you are asking.
accent acute, quotes, etc, that are coded in this manner: {\textopenbullet}. None read correctly.
Accent acute and quotes in latex are not created using `\textopenbullet` -- I don't even know that command, so of course that won't produce quotes or accent acute in bibbase either. But most special characters do work if that's your question.
@conference works on some, but not all of these.
That tag is not valid bibtex and is not supported by BibBase, I don't think. But inbook is.
Perhaps I could help better if you pointed me at your web site. Then maybe I can see what the issue is.
Copying here the comment I posted on the other ticket you opened:
Carol, didn't I already answer that question here: https://bibbase.userecho.com/en/communities/1/topics/396-how-do-you-display-non-ascii-characters-such-as-the-degree-mark ? Or do you mean how do you use a text editor to add unicode characters into a bibtex file? That depends on your editor and operating system, but presumably the easiest would be to copy and paste that character from the web somewhere, e.g., here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Degree_symbol. Here is the symbol itself for your convenience: °
You can just literally copy&paste the degree symbol from the text above. You don't need to use any special character codes.
Then there is something wrong in your bibtex entry. The Paper link, as the name suggests, is supposed to point at the paper itself (PDF or similar). Look for a "url" field in your bibtex and see what it points at. You can also point me to your website where you are using this and I can take a look, too. In general though if you really don't want a paper link, then just don't include a url field in your bibtex entry.
Let me know if you have it live somewhere on a web page where I can look at it. Sometimes it's necessary to add
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8">
to the head of your page's html, see https://bibbase.userecho.com/en/helpdesks/2/tickets/92-accents-in-title-dont-render-correctly#comment-328.
You can use Unicode characters in your publication entries (in BibTex or another source) directly, no special action required.
Strange. I can't reproduce this. In any event, if you give me your zotero username then I can delete the key from your account. Maybe that will re-enable things.
ah, yes, you are right, it's still stored on your bibbase account if you are logged in. If you just want to use your Zotero publications on your homepage then you can first log out from BibBase and then repeat the Zotero flow. It should work then. I'll see that we accommodate this case where a stores zotero key is no longer valid (and then just offer to re-authenticate).
Thanks for reporting.
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Actually nevermind, @strings are supported but were only working for lower-case string names. We've just pushed a fix for that to make them work for upper-case names as well. Your bib is now rendering fine.