Helga,
Regarding importing your EndNote library, you can try exporting the
library in a well-known text based format and then write an import
filter to bring it into TW. You might also consider using BibTeX
instead of BibblyTiddly. Paulo Soares has a BibTeX plugin at
http://www.math.ist.utl.pt/~psoares/addons.html.
Personally, I think you might want to avoid dealing with bibliography
data directly in TW altogether. Instead, I would use Firefox with
Zotero. I presume you know where to find Firefox, and you can find
Zotero here:
http://www.zotero.org/. You can export from EndNote and
import to Zotero pretty easily, and most things work. The only problem
in your situation (and mine) is that the current incantation of Zotero
bogs down a bit with very large bibliographic databases, but the
developers say they are addressing this. Given the performance hit
with large files in the current version of Zotero, I'd recommend
continuing to use EndNote for your main database and using Zotero+TW
for notes and related references.
For rendering citations in TW, you can then use OpenOffice.org with
the Zotero plugin to create tiddlers in html. Use the <html></html>
tags in the tiddler to surround the text from OOo. You can automate
the linkage between TW and OOo a bit with Pascal Collins'
ExternalizePlugin and set OOo to your external editor. This works
quite well, although the references for a given note are stored in its
tiddler, rather than in a single tiddler for the entire TW.
Ideally we'd have a Zotero plugin much like Paulo's BibTeX plugin. It
would give the user the option of configuring reference lists to (a)
appear in the individual tiddler with the citations, (b) in a single
tiddler for the entire TW (complete with embedded links to references
in the reference list, or (c) to any of a set of reference lists named
by tags in the citing tiddler.
Still, rather than reinvent the wheel, I think this approach is
adequate and practical. In particular, accessing the bibliographic
database through your browser, as Zotero does, seems much more useful
and flexible than housing it in TW. The advantages outweigh the
somewhat clumsy way one currently has to integrate Zotero (or any
other bibliographic software) into TW. Besides, a Zotero plugin might
show up some day.
Swamy
On Jan 14, 6:58 am, "Dave Gifford -
http://www.giffmex.org/"