

Open Mathematics is a premier source of a high quality research.

#Readcube papers specify publication date full
The journal aims at presenting high-impact and relevant research on topics across the full span of mathematics. Our standard policy requires each paper to be reviewed by at least two Referees and the peer-review process is single-blind. Open Mathematics is listed inter alia by Clarivate Analytics (formerly Thomson Reuters) - Current Contents/Physical, Chemical and Earth Sciences, JCR and SCIE. The journal provides the readers with free, instant, and permanent access to all content worldwide and the authors with extensive promotion of published articles, long-time preservation, no space constraints and quick publication after the acceptance. Search for any paper that you purchased or in shared libraries any article that was purchased.Open Mathematics is a fully peer-reviewed open access journal that publishes significant, original and relevant works in all areas of mathematics. Search any text that has been highlighted, underlined or struck through Search any text that has been put into notes of references or annotation notes For shared libraries this is the number of times anyone has opened it combined For personal libraries this is how many times you have opened the paper. The number of times the paper was opened. The last time the reference attachment was opened in yyyy format The date the paper or reference was added to the library in yyyy format The year of the paper or reference in yyyy format Searchable FieldĪny text in the abstract of the paper or reference Look below for a complete list of all searchable fields. NOT(_exists_:author) All supported fields Or make a query to see if any of your references are making articles. You can also pair it with _exists_ to find references missing attachments NOT(_exists_:files) So if you are tired of seeing your shark references you can use NOT(shark) Our NOT search query will search for everything but what you put.

You can also use it to search and see all of your papers with a rating attached to them. You can use it to see all of your papers with files _exists_:files The exists search query works slightly differently. So if you want to see all your favorite content simply search for favorite:true Exists searches The field is either true or false for statuses such as unread, favorite, and purchased. We have a variety of boolean fields that you can choose from. author:john gives you to many results so try author:john (journal:nature OR journal:Shark) So say you have a couple paper’s author in mind and you know they publish in certain journals. Ranges can be used for year, ratings, added, and times_opened Parenthetical Grouping Of course you can reverse this to see all articles after a certain time period. So say you want to see all papers before 1993. You can also use a wildcard (*) for one end of your range query. For instance I want all the papers in my library from year 1990 to 1993. The year field also supports date ranges. year:2015 would search all the papers in year 2015. If you are looking for date queries you can search the year field. Remember that OR needs to be capitalized to work Ranges If you want references about elephants or sharks you would use the OR query. So in the query above… all of the above papers must include elephant and shark somewhere in the fields. Elephant Shark is the same as elephant AND shark. If you are searching for all papers for Elephants and Sharks you just need a space but you can also use the AND query. Just type all of your search terms with a space in between. Combining Search TermsĬombining search terms is easy too. If you don’t use quotes you may get back more results as the second word is considered a search of all the fields like our first example. If you want to search for a journal or field with multiple words you will need to use quotes. For instance I love the journal “Shark Diaries”. If you are searching for data in a specific field, just start your query with that fields name. Searches are also not case sensitive so typing shark or Shark will get you the same search results. This includes article abstracts, annotations, highlighted text, journal name, etc. For example, if you want to search for “Shark” – just type shark into the search box and we will return results back to you that match the term in any field. Our standard search will search all the fields for you. Remember that any search query you make can be used to create a Smart List. This article will help you take advantage of advanced search techniques to help you get the most out of your growing reference/PDF library.
