Create a new instance of Cite
:
new Cite(data[, options])
data
can be any of the input types listed in input_typesoptions
is an optional object with the input options listed in Input Options
Example
const example = new Cite('10.5281/zenodo.1005176')
The optional second
options
argument is omitted here
You can access the parsed data like this:
> example.data
< [{title: 'Citation.js', DOI: '10.5281/zenodo.1005176', ...}]
You can also iterate over the data with a for...of
loop:
const result = []
for (const entry of example) {
result.push(entry.DOI)
}
> result
< ['10.5281/zenodo.1005176']
Cite.async()
You can also create a Cite
instance asynchronously with a callback. This is recommended when parsing data that requires using APIs, like Wikidata IDs, Wikidata JSON, DOIs and URLs.
Cite.async('10.5281/zenodo.1005176', function (example) {
example.data // [{DOI: '10.5281/zenodo.1005176', ...}]
})
If you omit the callback, Cite.async()
returns a Promise
:
const example = await Cite.async('10.5281/zenodo.1005176')
// or
Cite.async('10.5281/zenodo.1005176').then(function (example) {
example.data
})
You can use pass options to Cite.async()
too, like this:
Cite.async('10.5281/zenodo.1005176', options, function (example) {
example.data // [{DOI: '10.5281/zenodo.1005176', ...}]
})
// or
const example = await Cite.async('10.5281/zenodo.1005176', options)
// or
Cite.async('10.5281/zenodo.1005176', options).then(function (example) {
example.data
})