@Chapter @Title { References } @Tag { biblio } @Begin @LP The simple way to make a list of references is to put them in a numbered references. @Index { references } or tagged list at the end of your document. If you use references only rarely, that is probably the best way, but if you use them frequently this chapter will save you hours of work in the long run. @PP Some good general principles and many examples have been given by van Leunen van.leunen. @Index { van Leunen, Mary-Claire } @Cite { $vanleunen1992handbook }. Broadly speaking Lout follows her recommendations, with some unification and scaling back as is inevitable with software. Scribe @Cite { $reid1980scribe } latex. @Index @LaTeX scribe. @RawIndex Scribe scribe.reference @SubIndex { reference formatting } and @LaTeX @Cite { $lamport1986latex } followed the first edition of the same source, so translation from Scribe and @LaTeX references is fairly straightforward. @BeginSections @Include { ref_sett } @Include { ref_cite } @Include { ref_labe } @Include { ref_entr } @Include { ref_chan } @Include { ref_crea } @EndSections @End @Chapter