People who have written a review should know that it is very cumbersome to manage when the references are particularly high, especially when you don't know a few tricks.
Take my experience as an example, edit the document with word2010, refer directly to the literature, and then write the corresponding label. It was a good start,
Until one day, the reference was hundreds, and then suddenly found that in the middle section of the article can continue to add a little text, and quote the article.
This look can put me stumped, originally lazy, this look to change hundreds of references, think about the trouble, so the Internet search method, and indeed found.
There are about two kinds of methods:
First, through ready-made tools, this is not the focus of my research, not discussed.
The second is to use the functions provided by the editor itself, the editor is generally word or latex, they have their own reference layout function. Let's take word2010 as an example:
The first is to define the reference of the label format, to use Word automatically generated by the label, you can not write it up, otherwise it is undetectable.
Next, place the cursor where you want to add the reference, and then click "Insert", "Cross-reference", in the window "reference type" is "numbered item" and "Reference content" is "paragraph number".
Again, is to select the corresponding reference, and then determine the line. The last label that appears is to hold down CTRL and click to link past.
Finally, if you modify the reference, then select all the text, then the right-click Update threshold, you can update the reference label.
PS::: It is particularly important to note that this approach is flawed: only after the first article inserted or deleted the document will be updated, that the first reference in the text of the label will not change, need to manually modify, but the others can correspond to changes, so it can be accepted.
Sorting problems after adding or deleting a reference to a paper