You might want to consider this one:
Cottrell, A., and Lucchetti, R. (2007) "Gretl User's Guide," URL
{http://ricardo.ecn.wfu.edu/pub//gretl/manual/en/gretl-guide.pdf},
[Online; retrieved
February 5, 2007].
Cheers,
A. Talha YALTA
On 2/5/07, Riccardo (Jack) Lucchetti <r.lucchetti(a)univpm.it> wrote:
 On Sun, February 4, 2007 21:03, Cristian Rigamonti wrote:
 > On Fri, Jan 26, 2007 at 01:45:25PM +0100, Johannes Fichtinger wrote:
 >> Hi all,
 >>
 >> is there any preferred way to cite GRETL in publications?
 >
 > I don't know if this is the preferred way, but you can take a look at:
 >
 >   Baiocchi, G. and Distaso, W. (2003) ``GRETL: Econometric software
 >     for the GNU generation'', Journal of Applied Econometrics,
 >     18, pp. 105-10.
 >
 > or (this one I've just discovered)
 >
 >   Renfro, C.G., 2004. A compendium of existing econometric soft-
 >     ware packages. Journal of Economics and Social Measurement
 >     29, 359409.
 >
 >   also published in:
 >
 >   Renfro, C.G. (ed), 2004. Computational Econometrics: Its Impact on the
 >   Development of Quantitative Economics. IOS Press.
 Very interesting, thanks Cri.
 However, I think we should give some standard format for citing the gretl
 manual as well. The trouble is, I don't know of any established
 convention for citing material avaialbe on the Web and not elsewhere. J.
 Doornik, for example, recommends citing the Ox manual as
 Doornik, J.A. (2002), Object-Oriented Matrix Programming Using Ox, 3rd
 ed. London: Timberlake Consultants Press and Oxford: 
www.doornik.com
 For gretl, I wonder whether just an URL is ok, as in
 Cottrell, A and Lucchetti, R. (2007) Gretl User Manual,
 
http://ricardo.ecn.wfu.edu/pub/gretl/manual/
 What do you guys think?
 Riccardo (Jack) Lucchetti
 Dipartimento di Economia
 Facoltà di Economia "G. Fuà"
 Ancona
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