The Citation File Format project (Druskat et al. 2021) defines a standardized format for providing software or datasets citation metadata in plaintext files that are easy to read by both humans and machines.
This metadata format is being adopted by GitHub as the primary format for its built-in citation support (GitHub 2021). Other leading archives for scientific software, including Zenodo and Zotero (Druskat 2021), have included as well support for CITATION.cff files in their GitHub integration.
The cffr package provides utilities to generate and validate these CITATION.cff files automatically for R (R Core Team 2021) packages by parsing the DESCRIPTION file and the native R citation file. The package also includes utilities and examples for parsing components as persons and additional citations, as well as several vignettes which illustrate both the basic usage of the package as well as some more technical details about the metadata extraction process.
Citation of research software on research project is often omitted (Salmon, Chamberlain, and Ram 2021) . Among many reasons why software is not cited, one is the lack of a clear citation information from package developers.
Some of the main reasons for citing software used on research are:
CITATION.cff files provides a clear citation rules for software. The format is easily readable by humans and also can be parsed by appropriate software. The adoption of GitHub of this format sends a strong message that research software is something worthy of citation, and therefore deserves credit.
The cffr package allow R software developers to create CITATION.cff files from the metadata already included on the package. Additionally, the package also include validation tools via the jsonvalidate package (FitzJohn et al. 2021), that allow developers to assess the validity of the file created using the latest CFF schema.json.
I would like to thank Carl Boettiger, Maëlle Salmon and the rest of contributors of the codemetar package (Boettiger and Salmon 2021). This package was the primary inspiration for developing cffr and shares a common goal of increasing awareness on the efforts of software developers.
I would like also to thank João Martins and Scott Chamberlain for thorough reviews, that helps improving the package and the documentation as well as Emily Riederer for handling the review process.
Hernangómez, D., (2021). cffr: Generate Citation File Format Metadata for R Packages. Journal of Open Source Software, 6(67), 3900, https://doi.org/10.21105/joss.03900
@article{hernangomez2021,
doi = {10.21105/joss.03900},
url = {https://doi.org/10.21105/joss.03900},
year = {2021},
publisher = {The Open Journal},
volume = {6},
number = {67},
pages = {3900},
author = {Diego Hernangómez},
title = {cffr: Generate Citation File Format Metadata for R Packages},
journal = {Journal of Open Source Software}
}
Independent Researcher, https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8457-4658↩︎