“I found no citation commands while reading myFile.aux”












11















I'm trying to compile myFile.tex, a program which draws on bibtex and biber



documentclass[12pt]{article}
usepackage{amsmath}
usepackage[style=authoryear,backend=biber]{biblatex}
addbibresource{myRefs.bib}
...
begin{document}
...By the Seuss theoremtextcite{firstRef}
...
section{References}
printbibliography
end{document}


Upon compiling, this gave me the following errors



I found no citation commands---while reading file myFile.aux
I found no bibdata command---while reading file myFile.aux
I found no bibstyle command---while reading file myFile.aux


I don't understand why this is happening, or what I have to do with myFile.aux. Can anyone explain this and how to get around it?










share|improve this question

























  • Hi! Please help us to help you and add a minimal working example (MWE) that illustrates your problem. It will be much easier for us to reproduce your situation and find out what the issue is when we see compilable code, starting with documentclass{...} and ending with end{document}.

    – yo'
    Mar 2 '15 at 14:23






  • 5





    You've asked for the Biber back-end and then are running BibTeX!

    – Joseph Wright
    Mar 2 '15 at 14:23











  • Joseph, is that a problem? I'm sorry my newness is showing here.

    – Sammieo
    Mar 3 '15 at 21:08






  • 3





    Yes, if you choose biber, you have to run biber.

    – MaxNoe
    Mar 3 '15 at 23:01
















11















I'm trying to compile myFile.tex, a program which draws on bibtex and biber



documentclass[12pt]{article}
usepackage{amsmath}
usepackage[style=authoryear,backend=biber]{biblatex}
addbibresource{myRefs.bib}
...
begin{document}
...By the Seuss theoremtextcite{firstRef}
...
section{References}
printbibliography
end{document}


Upon compiling, this gave me the following errors



I found no citation commands---while reading file myFile.aux
I found no bibdata command---while reading file myFile.aux
I found no bibstyle command---while reading file myFile.aux


I don't understand why this is happening, or what I have to do with myFile.aux. Can anyone explain this and how to get around it?










share|improve this question

























  • Hi! Please help us to help you and add a minimal working example (MWE) that illustrates your problem. It will be much easier for us to reproduce your situation and find out what the issue is when we see compilable code, starting with documentclass{...} and ending with end{document}.

    – yo'
    Mar 2 '15 at 14:23






  • 5





    You've asked for the Biber back-end and then are running BibTeX!

    – Joseph Wright
    Mar 2 '15 at 14:23











  • Joseph, is that a problem? I'm sorry my newness is showing here.

    – Sammieo
    Mar 3 '15 at 21:08






  • 3





    Yes, if you choose biber, you have to run biber.

    – MaxNoe
    Mar 3 '15 at 23:01














11












11








11


4






I'm trying to compile myFile.tex, a program which draws on bibtex and biber



documentclass[12pt]{article}
usepackage{amsmath}
usepackage[style=authoryear,backend=biber]{biblatex}
addbibresource{myRefs.bib}
...
begin{document}
...By the Seuss theoremtextcite{firstRef}
...
section{References}
printbibliography
end{document}


Upon compiling, this gave me the following errors



I found no citation commands---while reading file myFile.aux
I found no bibdata command---while reading file myFile.aux
I found no bibstyle command---while reading file myFile.aux


I don't understand why this is happening, or what I have to do with myFile.aux. Can anyone explain this and how to get around it?










share|improve this question
















I'm trying to compile myFile.tex, a program which draws on bibtex and biber



documentclass[12pt]{article}
usepackage{amsmath}
usepackage[style=authoryear,backend=biber]{biblatex}
addbibresource{myRefs.bib}
...
begin{document}
...By the Seuss theoremtextcite{firstRef}
...
section{References}
printbibliography
end{document}


Upon compiling, this gave me the following errors



I found no citation commands---while reading file myFile.aux
I found no bibdata command---while reading file myFile.aux
I found no bibstyle command---while reading file myFile.aux


I don't understand why this is happening, or what I have to do with myFile.aux. Can anyone explain this and how to get around it?







bibtex errors citing auxiliary-files






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Mar 3 '15 at 21:06







Sammieo

















asked Mar 2 '15 at 14:19









SammieoSammieo

95227




95227













  • Hi! Please help us to help you and add a minimal working example (MWE) that illustrates your problem. It will be much easier for us to reproduce your situation and find out what the issue is when we see compilable code, starting with documentclass{...} and ending with end{document}.

    – yo'
    Mar 2 '15 at 14:23






  • 5





    You've asked for the Biber back-end and then are running BibTeX!

    – Joseph Wright
    Mar 2 '15 at 14:23











  • Joseph, is that a problem? I'm sorry my newness is showing here.

    – Sammieo
    Mar 3 '15 at 21:08






  • 3





    Yes, if you choose biber, you have to run biber.

    – MaxNoe
    Mar 3 '15 at 23:01



















  • Hi! Please help us to help you and add a minimal working example (MWE) that illustrates your problem. It will be much easier for us to reproduce your situation and find out what the issue is when we see compilable code, starting with documentclass{...} and ending with end{document}.

    – yo'
    Mar 2 '15 at 14:23






  • 5





    You've asked for the Biber back-end and then are running BibTeX!

    – Joseph Wright
    Mar 2 '15 at 14:23











  • Joseph, is that a problem? I'm sorry my newness is showing here.

    – Sammieo
    Mar 3 '15 at 21:08






  • 3





    Yes, if you choose biber, you have to run biber.

    – MaxNoe
    Mar 3 '15 at 23:01

















Hi! Please help us to help you and add a minimal working example (MWE) that illustrates your problem. It will be much easier for us to reproduce your situation and find out what the issue is when we see compilable code, starting with documentclass{...} and ending with end{document}.

– yo'
Mar 2 '15 at 14:23





Hi! Please help us to help you and add a minimal working example (MWE) that illustrates your problem. It will be much easier for us to reproduce your situation and find out what the issue is when we see compilable code, starting with documentclass{...} and ending with end{document}.

– yo'
Mar 2 '15 at 14:23




5




5





You've asked for the Biber back-end and then are running BibTeX!

– Joseph Wright
Mar 2 '15 at 14:23





You've asked for the Biber back-end and then are running BibTeX!

– Joseph Wright
Mar 2 '15 at 14:23













Joseph, is that a problem? I'm sorry my newness is showing here.

– Sammieo
Mar 3 '15 at 21:08





Joseph, is that a problem? I'm sorry my newness is showing here.

– Sammieo
Mar 3 '15 at 21:08




3




3





Yes, if you choose biber, you have to run biber.

– MaxNoe
Mar 3 '15 at 23:01





Yes, if you choose biber, you have to run biber.

– MaxNoe
Mar 3 '15 at 23:01










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















11














As mentioned in the comments, you should run biber to compile your bib file as you have used biber as the backend.



usepackage[style=authoryear,backend=biber]{biblatex}


Here are the commands to compile your myFile.tex and your .bib files:



pdflatex myFile
biber myFile
pdflatex myFile





share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    With recent versions of biblatex, backend=biber is the standard, so even Biber is not specified explicitly, one still has to run Biber. For help on running Biber with editors see Biblatex with Biber: Configuring my editor to avoid undefined citations.

    – moewe
    Apr 13 '16 at 8:14



















0














I have the same problem with TeXstudio, and backend=biber does not work for me. If you're using TeXstudio too, you have two options:




  1. change the default bibliography tool in TeXstudio settings (Options > Configure TeXstudio > Build > Default Bibliography Tool)



  2. add this line at the beginning of the document



    % !BIB TS-program = biber








share|improve this answer























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    2 Answers
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    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

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    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    11














    As mentioned in the comments, you should run biber to compile your bib file as you have used biber as the backend.



    usepackage[style=authoryear,backend=biber]{biblatex}


    Here are the commands to compile your myFile.tex and your .bib files:



    pdflatex myFile
    biber myFile
    pdflatex myFile





    share|improve this answer



















    • 1





      With recent versions of biblatex, backend=biber is the standard, so even Biber is not specified explicitly, one still has to run Biber. For help on running Biber with editors see Biblatex with Biber: Configuring my editor to avoid undefined citations.

      – moewe
      Apr 13 '16 at 8:14
















    11














    As mentioned in the comments, you should run biber to compile your bib file as you have used biber as the backend.



    usepackage[style=authoryear,backend=biber]{biblatex}


    Here are the commands to compile your myFile.tex and your .bib files:



    pdflatex myFile
    biber myFile
    pdflatex myFile





    share|improve this answer



















    • 1





      With recent versions of biblatex, backend=biber is the standard, so even Biber is not specified explicitly, one still has to run Biber. For help on running Biber with editors see Biblatex with Biber: Configuring my editor to avoid undefined citations.

      – moewe
      Apr 13 '16 at 8:14














    11












    11








    11







    As mentioned in the comments, you should run biber to compile your bib file as you have used biber as the backend.



    usepackage[style=authoryear,backend=biber]{biblatex}


    Here are the commands to compile your myFile.tex and your .bib files:



    pdflatex myFile
    biber myFile
    pdflatex myFile





    share|improve this answer













    As mentioned in the comments, you should run biber to compile your bib file as you have used biber as the backend.



    usepackage[style=authoryear,backend=biber]{biblatex}


    Here are the commands to compile your myFile.tex and your .bib files:



    pdflatex myFile
    biber myFile
    pdflatex myFile






    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Apr 19 '15 at 13:19









    Mukesh ChapagainMukesh Chapagain

    28426




    28426








    • 1





      With recent versions of biblatex, backend=biber is the standard, so even Biber is not specified explicitly, one still has to run Biber. For help on running Biber with editors see Biblatex with Biber: Configuring my editor to avoid undefined citations.

      – moewe
      Apr 13 '16 at 8:14














    • 1





      With recent versions of biblatex, backend=biber is the standard, so even Biber is not specified explicitly, one still has to run Biber. For help on running Biber with editors see Biblatex with Biber: Configuring my editor to avoid undefined citations.

      – moewe
      Apr 13 '16 at 8:14








    1




    1





    With recent versions of biblatex, backend=biber is the standard, so even Biber is not specified explicitly, one still has to run Biber. For help on running Biber with editors see Biblatex with Biber: Configuring my editor to avoid undefined citations.

    – moewe
    Apr 13 '16 at 8:14





    With recent versions of biblatex, backend=biber is the standard, so even Biber is not specified explicitly, one still has to run Biber. For help on running Biber with editors see Biblatex with Biber: Configuring my editor to avoid undefined citations.

    – moewe
    Apr 13 '16 at 8:14











    0














    I have the same problem with TeXstudio, and backend=biber does not work for me. If you're using TeXstudio too, you have two options:




    1. change the default bibliography tool in TeXstudio settings (Options > Configure TeXstudio > Build > Default Bibliography Tool)



    2. add this line at the beginning of the document



      % !BIB TS-program = biber








    share|improve this answer




























      0














      I have the same problem with TeXstudio, and backend=biber does not work for me. If you're using TeXstudio too, you have two options:




      1. change the default bibliography tool in TeXstudio settings (Options > Configure TeXstudio > Build > Default Bibliography Tool)



      2. add this line at the beginning of the document



        % !BIB TS-program = biber








      share|improve this answer


























        0












        0








        0







        I have the same problem with TeXstudio, and backend=biber does not work for me. If you're using TeXstudio too, you have two options:




        1. change the default bibliography tool in TeXstudio settings (Options > Configure TeXstudio > Build > Default Bibliography Tool)



        2. add this line at the beginning of the document



          % !BIB TS-program = biber








        share|improve this answer













        I have the same problem with TeXstudio, and backend=biber does not work for me. If you're using TeXstudio too, you have two options:




        1. change the default bibliography tool in TeXstudio settings (Options > Configure TeXstudio > Build > Default Bibliography Tool)



        2. add this line at the beginning of the document



          % !BIB TS-program = biber









        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered May 4 '18 at 0:26









        TaekwondavideTaekwondavide

        38313




        38313






























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