From: Tom.Faigle[tfaigle vt.edu]
> I haven't used Endnote that long, so someone else might
be able to
> offer a better insight, but until then, I'll tell you
what I do. I
> download the PDF from the data source such as JSTOR.
Then I import
> the citation, then associate the PDF to the citation in
Endnote. As I
> said, I'm not sure if there is an easier way, but it
works.
An advantage to going through the extra step is that you can
name and
categorize the articles in a way that makes sense to *you*.
When I
download PDF articles, I rename them in author-date format
(i.e.,
"Nahkola & Saanilahti 2004.pdf"), and place
them in a subfolder of
c:articles (which I created specifically for holding PDFs
of
articles), so the article I gave as an example got put in
c:articlespost-vernacular change.
This makes it much easier to find an article I have when I
don't have
Endnote running.
--
David Bowie University of
Central Florida
Jeanne's Two Laws of Chocolate: If there is no
chocolate in the
house, there is too little; some must be purchased. If
there is
chocolate in the house, there is too much; it must be
consumed.
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