

I’ve included screenshots and descriptions of what’s happening right before the screenshot.ġ.I’m using a test-book item in zotero, with a lorem ipsum text randomly highlighted.I do use Zotero (5.0.96.1) for the main sections #1 and #2, and Juris-M for everything from #3 onward. For this post and to avoid confusion, I’m going to say ‘zotero’, which means ‘the Juris-M build of zotero’. I have not tried the latest beta-builds of zotero as of this date. Other than the additional legal information added on to cases in my library, everything else should translate to zotero. I’m currently using Juris-M, which is based on zotero with additional zotero fields for legal referencing.I’ve created a basic “Setting up Zotero” process, for those who want that.

I’m using a mac for this, and have not tested the workflow on windows.It does not work with earlier releases of mdnotes. I am not sure how any of this will work for future versions of zotero. The mdnotes plugin I’m using is the current alpha build, that makes all of this really great.If you still wish to use this workflow, most of it has not changed for Zotero 6 the only issue is that you will need to use the older version of zotfile - version 5.0.16 ( available here) and disable updates on it.

#CHROME ZOTERO OUT OF DATE PDF#
There are still differences in operation I still use zotfile because (1) zotero pdf reader doesn’t offer as many annotation options and (2) ZI isn’t always accurate at extracting highlights from some pdfs. This is a workfrow about setting up a smooth(ish) transition from getting a pdf into zotero (which is a reference manager), annotating it, extracting annotations (with or without color coding for that), pushing those into Obsidian using the mdnotes plugin - specifically, the latest alppha release at the time of this post: 0.2.0 alpha4 and have those readily usable with Michael Brenan’s Dataview plugin.Ģ023 Update: there is a new plugin, the Zotero Integration plugin, that works well and simplifies the transfer of highlights from zotero to obsidian.
