A feature complete BibTeX parser using nom.
nom-bibtex can parse the four differents types of entries listed in the BibTeX format description:
- Preambles which allows to call LaTeX command inside your BibTeX.
- Strings which defines abbreviations in a key-value format.
- Comments.
- Bibliography entries.
extern crate nom_bibtex;
use nom_bibtex::*;
const BIBFILE_DATA: &str = r#"@preamble{
"A bibtex preamble"
}
@Comment{
Here is a comment.
}
Another comment!
@string ( name= "Charles Vandevoorde")
@string (github = "https://github.com/charlesvdv")
@misc {my_citation_key,
author= name,
title = "nom-bibtex",
note = "Github: " # github
}
"#;
fn main() {
let bibtex = Bibtex::parse(BIBFILE_DATA).unwrap();
let preambles = bibtex.preambles();
assert_eq!(preambles[0], "A bibtex preamble");
let comments = bibtex.comments();
assert_eq!(comments[0], "Here is a comment.");
assert_eq!(comments[1], "Another comment!");
let variables = bibtex.variables();
assert_eq!(variables["name"], "Charles Vandevoorde");
assert_eq!(variables["github"], "https://github.com/charlesvdv");
let biblio = &bibtex.bibliographies()[0];
assert_eq!(biblio.entry_type(), "misc");
assert_eq!(biblio.citation_key(), "my_citation_key");
let bib_tags = biblio.tags();
assert_eq!(bib_tags["author"], "Charles Vandevoorde");
assert_eq!(bib_tags["title"], "nom-bibtex");
assert_eq!(bib_tags["note"], "Github: https://github.com/charlesvdv");
}