Gb7714-87 Endnote !!top!!

(often abbreviated as GB7714-87 ) is a now-superseded Chinese national standard for bibliographic references. The code breaks down as follows:

EndNote provides specific style files to automate formatting for this standard. You can download and install these styles to your EndNote library to ensure your citations and "deep paper" bibliographies comply with Chinese academic requirements. GB/T 7714 (Numeric) gb7714-87 endnote

To implement the GB7714-87 standard in EndNote: (often abbreviated as GB7714-87 ) is a now-superseded

This paper analyzes the historical context, the formatting requirements of the 1987 standard, and the implementation challenges faced by EndNote users. GB/T 7714 (Numeric) To implement the GB7714-87 standard

Why? Because EndNote's style development historically prioritized international standards. The 1987 version is considered outdated, and maintaining it would require a separate code branch due to conflicting logic in author parsing and date sequencing.

| Problem | Solution | |--------|----------| | References show English punctuation only | Manually edit the .ens file (Edit → Output Styles → Edit “GBT7714”) → change punctuation to Chinese style if needed. | | Author names reversed incorrectly | Ensure in your EndNote library: Chinese authors should be entered as “Wang, Li” (family, given). No comma for English names if using family name first. | | “et al.” vs “等” | GB/T 7714-2015 allows both. You can edit the style: Bibliographic Templates → change “et al.” to “等” if required. | | No space after Chinese colon/comma | Often correct—Chinese punctuation doesn't need extra space. |