![]() ![]() Some of them are configuration files, project data, logs or other output data generated by BibDesk. The only caveat is that you have to make sure not to change the BibDesk entry’s cite key after you link to it with Hook, or else the link will break. The BibDesk program works with many file extensions by default. But Hook will work with BibDesk once you get the AppleScripts set up, which should be easy to do. I don’t currently use Hook, so I can’t help I just found this thread in a web search. bib file is ready from BibDesk, just go to TeXShop and compile it by clicking on Composer > BibTeX. If you can’t figure out by yourself how to use that AppleScript code, you could respond here and try tagging the name of one of the Hook experts and see if they could help you. So apparently all you need to make Hook work with BibDesk is an AppleScript to get the URL and name of a BibDesk entry, and the last message in that thread on the bibdesk-users mailing list (see previous link) has some AppleScript code that may work. The second one, is that it can read comments/notes written in metadata. Files are stored using Mac OS aliases, so you can move them in the Finder without breaking BibDesk’s links. For example, if the cite key of an entry is Max:2021er, then the URL for that entry is x-bdsk://Max:2021er (this works in any Mac application). The first one is that once a PDF is added to BibDesk, the app can find it even if the document is moved in the Finder. The summary of that thread on the bibdesk-users mailing list is: Hook can automatically open a x-bdsk://citekey URL, which is the standard URL for linking to a BibDesk entry. Matt also started a thread about this topic on the bibdesk-users mailing list (see: Hook integration for BibDesk?) around the same time that he posted here, last November.
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