I just came up with a use of #ChatGPT that promises to be a huge time-saver: reformatting of bibliographies. For reasons, I never follow the standard styles when I write. Of course editors usually insist on whatever. So here's ChatGPT:
Human: Please reformat the following reference in MLA style:
Alster, Bendt (1973). “An Aspect of ‘Enmerkar and the Lord of Aratta’”. Revue d'Assyriologie et d'archéologie orientale 67(2): 101–110.
ChatGPT:
Alster, Bendt. "An Aspect of 'Enmerkar and the Lord of Aratta'." Revue d'Assyriologie et d'archéologie orientale 67, no. 2 (1973): 101-110.
Human:
Now give me a bibtex for that.
ChatGPT:
Here is a BibTeX entry for the reference you provided:
@article{alster1973aspect,
title={An Aspect of 'Enmerkar and the Lord of Aratta'},
author={Alster, Bendt},
journal={Revue d'Assyriologie et d'archéologie orientale},
volume={67},
number={2},
pages={101--110},
year={1973}
}
... that looks correct to me – of course it will need proofreading, but it looks like it will save a lot of pain.
🙂
@boris_steipe @kbkorb here's a functioning "app" online i made for us, i think it works for more than one entry at a time. hope you find this interesting ! would love to figure even more out with regards to certain things it can do well and talk about crowdsourcing https://cookup.ai/a/bibliography-jucn4woy/
It only worked correctly for one entry for me.
@kbkorb @boris_steipe here's what i get to convert APA into MLA https://cookup.ai/o/derwing-t-m-rossiter-m-j-munro-m-j-9jdhuf7vzq/
@kbkorb @boris_steipe by the way the full prompt with user input in {{ }} is :
{{ Unstructured Bibliographic Entries }} convert to {{ MLA, APA, Chicago, Harvard , style }} and generate the BibTeX script for it