fixed markdown in README

master
Miloš Jovanović 5 years ago
parent caa8e17538
commit 5f179c2832

@ -5,13 +5,17 @@ This is a bash script which helps convert markdown files into properly formatted
## Workflow ## Workflow
The script needs three things: The script needs three things:
*1) Citation styles*
**1) Citation styles**
You will need to download [citation-styles](https://github.com/citation-style-language/styles), and specify the one you want to use in the command line switches. You will need to download [citation-styles](https://github.com/citation-style-language/styles), and specify the one you want to use in the command line switches.
*2) A Reference Library* **2) A Reference Library**
For the converter to know what works you are citing, you will need a .bib library file with the citations. I recommend using Zotero and [BetterBiBTeX](https://retorque.re/zotero-better-bibtex/) to keep track of your books and articles and what not. The extension should autoupdating your citations with unique keys that way. For the converter to know what works you are citing, you will need a .bib library file with the citations. I recommend using Zotero and [BetterBiBTeX](https://retorque.re/zotero-better-bibtex/) to keep track of your books and articles and what not. The extension should autoupdating your citations with unique keys that way.
*3) A Template file* **3) A Template file**
Finally, you will need a template file, so markdownacademic will know what your document should look like - what the margins and fonts are, etc. You can often download a template .docx file from the website of the journal you're writing for. A sample `template.docx` is included. Finally, you will need a template file, so markdownacademic will know what your document should look like - what the margins and fonts are, etc. You can often download a template .docx file from the website of the journal you're writing for. A sample `template.docx` is included.
## Why should I do this? ## Why should I do this?

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