How to use BibTeX elsarticle NUM names for citations?

How to use BibTeX elsarticle NUM names for citations?

citations using the elsarticle-num-names BibTeX style. Here is a reference to a journal article with a single author cite{article1}, to a journal article with two authors cite{article2} and three authors cite{article3}, and to a book

Is there a modified version of elsarticle NUM names?

Modified version of elsarticle-num-names.bst for sorting alphabetically by first author as required by Information Sciences as of Jan 2018 %% This file is part of the ‘Elsarticle Bundle’. %% later version. The latest version of this license is in %% version 1999/12/01 or later.

How many bibliography styles are there in Elsevier?

The Elsevier template you’ve linked to provides eight [8!] candidate bibliography styles, but only three of them do not contain num in their filenames. This leaves three candidate bibliography styles: model2-names, model4-names, and model5-names.

Do you sort bibliographic entries by author name?

According to the final link you provided in the comments, the bibliographic entries must not only be sorted alphabetically by authors’ surnames, but they must also be formatted according to APA-6 guidelines. Moreover, the citation call-outs must use authoryear style rather than, say, some numeric style.

Which is the best bibliography style for elsarticle?

Since you’re using the elsarticle document class, you may want to use the elsarticle-harv instead of the plainnat bibliography style.

What kind of citations does elsarticle-harv.bst give?

As its name suggests, elsarticle-harv.bst gives you authoryear-style citations — aka harvard-style citations — and references that are formatted according to the guidelines of most Elsevier-run journals that require authoryear-style citations.

How to create a bibliography in elsarticle TeX LaTeX?

You should specify authoryear in the class options. The filecontents* environment is just to make the example selfcontained, you don’t need it; change the \\bibliography line to have the name of your .bib file. Yes, I know that “Some Like It Hot” wasn’t shot in 1965. 😉