# @citation-js/core Convert different bibliographic metadata sources. [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/@citation-js/core.svg)](https://npmjs.org/package/@citation-js/core) [![NPM total downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dt/@citation-js/core.svg)](https://npmcharts.com/compare/@citation-js%2Fcore?minimal=true) ![License](https://img.shields.io/npm/l/@citation-js/core.svg) ![Dependency status](https://img.shields.io/librariesio/release/npm/@citation-js/core) --- ## Install npm install @citation-js/core ## Usage ### Getting Started You can read a guide on how to get started, together with some tutorials and examples, [here](https://citation.js.org/api/tutorial-getting_started.html). ### `Cite` > [More info](https://citation.js.org/api/tutorial-cite_.html) To use the [`Cite`](#cite) constructor, `require()` the module like this: ```js const {Cite} = require('@citation-js/core') ``` For example, to get the bibliographical data of the Wikidata item [`wd:Q21972834`](https://wikidata.org/wiki/Q21972834), and then format it in HTML, English and APA: ```js let example = new Cite('Q21972834') let output = example.format('bibliography', { format: 'html', template: 'apa', lang: 'en-US' }) console.log(output) ``` To test this code, go to [RunKit](https://runkit.com/larsgw/591b5651bd9b40001113931c). ### Async Use the async API (recommended for Wikidata, URL, and DOI input) like this: ```js let example = await Cite.async('Q21972834') let output = example.format('bibliography', { format: 'html', template: 'apa', lang: 'en-US' }) console.log(output) ``` > `Cite.async()` also supports options as the second argument, and a callback function as last argument.