The Source Line (Import Filters and Connection Files)

The source line is typically the most complex line of data in a record because it contains all of the information about the source of publication. For a journal article, the source line may contain the journal name, the volume number, the issue number, page numbers, and the year of publication. For a book, the source line may contain the publisher, the city, and the number of pages.

The source line in your filter must match exactly the source line in the data file in order for EndNote to distinguish one piece of information from another. You will often find more than one variation of a source line for a given reference type in a single data file, in which case you will need to create a separate source line for each variant, starting with the most complex source. The three source lines displayed below come from a single database:

          SO: Semin-Oncol. 76(3):465-71 1998

          SO: Semin-Oncol. 127:5-24 1999

          SO: Eur-J-Cancer. 118/6 (654-657) 1998

In the first SO: tag line, parentheses enclose the issue number "(3)". In the second SO: tag line, there is no issue, so a colon separates the volume number and the page numbers "127:5-24". In the third SO: tag line, a slash separates the volume number and the issue number "118/6", and parentheses enclose the page numbers "(654-657)".

Each variant in the data file’s source lines must be defined in your filter. Since EndNote tries to match the source line in the data file with the first defined source line in your filter, you should place the most detailed source line first, followed by progressively less detailed source lines.

The filter for the above source lines should look like this:

Tag

Field(s)

AU:

Author

TI:

Title

SO:

Journal. Volume(Issue):Pages Year

SO:

Journal. Volume/Issue (Pages) Year

SO:

Journal. Volume:Pages Year

KW:

Keywords

Note: If the filter fails to match a variation of the source line for a journal article, it is possible to have EndNote interpret the data on its own. See Source Parsing.

Related Topics

Fields with Special Characteristics

Literal Text vs. EndNote Fields

Templates for Different Reference Types

The {IGNORE} Field

The Basic Components of a Filter

The Filter Manager

The Reference Type Tag

Tips for Entering Tags and Fields

When Punctuation Repeats Within a Field

Working with Filter Templates