02-13-2020
Thank Neo, for this great honour and your kind words!
I agree that there are many who deserve this title and I feel honoured to be among them..
I am glad to be part of this wonderful community that helps others so that we continue to provide a welcoming, helpful and embracing environment to everyone and for those that make their first steps here in particular...
Thanks all and keep up the good work and most of all have fun!
---
@RavinderSingh: thanks for you kind words! I most certainly remember our conversations when you were starting out on these forums.. Just look at where your hard work and dedication have gotten you
Last edited by Scrutinizer; 02-13-2020 at 01:40 PM..
These 5 Users Gave Thanks to Scrutinizer For This Post:
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Yup it's true:
Transfer of power
This will put Python development in disarray.
Which reminded me of this thread I posted some time ago:
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Dear All,
I am pleased to post that I am announcing a new award, "Poster of the Year 2019" and calling for your nominations (privately to me).
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Dear All,
We are happy to post that I will be announcing soon my award for "Moderator of the Year 2019". This is a new award which I plan to announce in December of each year, starting this year (2019). The prizes will be (still working out the details):
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Today, I am very pleased to announce that the Moderator of the Year Award, 2019 has two very deserving winners.
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LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
nbibfind
NBIBFIND(1) General Commands Manual NBIBFIND(1)
NAME
nbibfind - find bibliography entries for BibTeX or NbibTeX
SYNOPSIS
nbibfind [-terse|-full|-bib] query [bibname...]
DESCRIPTION
nbibfind searches for BibTeX entries using the same query algorithm as NbibTeX. If the optional list of bibnames is given, it searches
only those bibliographies; otherwise, it searches all bibliographies on the user's BIBINPUTS (or on the standard system path). The lan-
guage of query is that of nbibtex(1).
OPTIONS
-terse Print a one-line summary of each matched entry (the default).
-full Print a longer summary of each matched entry, including full authors, year, and title, possibly spread over multiple lines.
-bib Print each entry in a form suitable for including in a .bib file.
EXAMPLES
nbibfind author=knuth:series=art-programming:volume=2
nbibfind knuth:seminumerical personal.bib
nbibfind harper-moggi:phase
nbibfind :essence-algol
nbibfind :essence-functional
QUERY LANGUAGE
The query language is that of nbibtex(1).
A query consists of a sequence of one or more constraints separated by colons. A constraint may be empty.
A nonempty constraint is of the form key=words, where key is the name of a field in the NbibTeX entry and words is a sequence of one or
more words separated by dashes. The contraint is satisfied if every word in words is found in the field named by key. (The key may also
be [type], which matches agains the type of the entry, or *, which looks for words in any field.)
As a convenience, keys may be defaulted in up to three constraints. In the first constraint, the default key is author. In the second
constraint, the default key is year if words is all digits, and is title otherwise. In the third constraint, the default key is year if
words is all digits, and is [type] otherwise.
To match a word in words, nbibfind uses the Boyer-Moore string-matching algorithm, so longer words are usually faster.
ENVIRONMENT
For .bib files, nbibfind uses the BIBINPUTS environment variable if that is set, otherwise the default. For details of the searching, see
tex(1) and kpsewhich(1).
SEE ALSO
nbibtex(1), latex(1), tex(1), kpsewhich(1), bibtex(1).
Leslie Lamport, LaTeX - A Document Preparation System, Addison-Wesley, 1985, ISBN 0-201-15790-X.
AUTHOR
Norman Ramsey, Harvard University.
4 May 2006 NBIBFIND(1)