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Wikipedia:Citing sources/example style - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Wikipedia:Citing sources/example style

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This page is a how-to guide detailing a practice or process on the English Wikipedia.
Shortcuts:
WP:CITE/ES
WP:REF/ES

There is currently no consensus on a preferred citation style or system for Wikipedia. If you cannot decide on which style to use, or if you do not know what information to include, an example based on the APA style is given below. In APA style, a widely accepted format for writing research papers, the references are listed at the end of the article in alphabetical order by author, and by year for identical authors. Also see MLA style and Harvard referencing.

Note that the style given below differs slightly from APA style in that it permits and encourages extra information such as the author's full first name. Title formatting is according to Wikipedia:Manual of Style (titles).

Note that most editors use citation templates to format article references, though the use of such templates is not required.

Contents

[edit] Books

  • Lincoln, Abraham; Grant, U. S.; & Davis, Jefferson (1861). Resolving Family Differences Peacefully (3rd ed.). Gettysburg: Printing Press. ISBN 0-12-345678-9.

For an edited book, put "(Ed.)" or "(Eds.)" in parentheses after the last author, before the date.

The ISBN (which is wikified automatically) is optional. If a book does not have an ISBN number, an LCCN ({{LCCN}}) or OCLC ({{OCLC}}) number may be used instead. Note, however, that use of ASIN numbers in Wikipedia is considered controversial.

For a specific article or chapter in an edited book, use:

  • Pooh, Winnie T. & Robin, Christopher (1926). "Modern techniques in heffalump capture". In A. A. Milne (Ed.), The Karma of Kanga, pp. 23–47. Hundred Acre Wood: Wol Press.

A good guideline is to list author names as they are written in the original article/book, without further abbreviation. The APA guidelines recommend abbreviating first names to initial letters instead, but since Wikipedia has no shortage of space, you need not abbreviate names. Indeed, there are good reasons to include the full names of authors; such information makes it much easier to find the cited work, and it also makes it possible to find other related information by the same author.

If Wikipedia has a page for the book, make the book title a link to it, but retain the full reference (for example, for printing). If the authors are notable (as above) and have not already been linked to from the article, then make their names link to their pages. It is also occasionally relevant to link a publisher, place of publication, etc.

(See also: {{cite book}}.)

[edit] Electronic equivalents

As service providers begin making books available online it will become increasingly useful to cite them in the encyclopedia. Eventually we can begin linking all book citations to their electronic equivalents. Here is an example citation for Google Book Search:

Amazon's search inside the book feature provides less data to non-registered users but is still quite useful. Consider:

[edit] Journal articles

Journal articles are formatted much as a chapter in a book would be—for example:

  • Brandybuck, Meriadoc (1955). "Herb lore of the Shire". Journal of the Royal Institute of Chemistry 10(2), 234–351.

The numbers after the journal title indicate: volume (issue number, optional), page numbers. Do not capitalize every word of the article title—only the first word, proper names, and the first word after a colon/period/dash. For an article that is available online, make the article title a link to the online version.

Whether journal titles should be abbreviated is questionable. On the one hand, many abbreviations are standardized ("J." for "Journal of") and library catalogs are often designed to help in locating abbreviated titles. On the other hand, abbreviations can be obscure to a person unused to scientific citations.

(See also: {{cite journal}})

[edit] Medical journal abstracts & free full-text

A huge number of medical abstracts are readable online at PubMed (http://pubmed.org). If your article relies on any medical paper, it's good to provide your readers with a link to the PMID abstract. But often the URL that your browser shows you when you are at pubmed.org is a one-time-only URL, useless to anyone else. Even if the URL is not a one-time URL, here is the best way to cite pubmed.org: type (for example) PMID 15153440 as your citation — Wikipedia will link it and format it as PMID 15153440. If you're relying on text that is not in the abstract, you might still want to link by typing (for example) abstract at PMID 15153440, which Wikipedia will display as: abstract at PMID 12345. In addition PubMed Central holds free full-text copies of many papers, which may be cited using {{PMC}} template (e.g. {{PMC|123456}} giving: Full text at PMC: 123456). PMID & PMC values may be used in the {{cite journal}} template if giving fuller citation details (also see Diberri's Wikipedia template filling tool).

[edit] Newspaper/magazine articles (or online periodicals)

  • Blair, Eric Arthur (August 29, 1949). "Looking forward to a bright tomorrow". New English Weekly, p. 57.

Or, for articles without a named author, put the title first:

  • "On the importance of modesty". (May 5, 1821). Pravda, pp. B1, C12.

Again, for online articles, make the article title a link to the URL; it may not be possible to supply a page number in this case, for example:

(See also: {{cite news}}.)

[edit] Web sites and articles (not from periodicals)

To cite an entire Web site, without specifying a specific document on the site, simply give the site's URL in the article text (this is an APA recommendation). In Wikipedia, a simple URL beginning with "http://" is automatically rendered clickable as well, which is what you want. Here is an example of such text: "Wikipedia is a popular web site at http://en.wikipedia.org".

Specific web pages (or sets of pages) are cited like books are (and you make the title a link), but with a retrieval date:

The parenthesized date should be the date/year the document was created, or last edited; this should be omitted if it cannot be determined. The "Retrieved" information helps a reader retrieve the same version that the writer viewed, using tools such as the Internet Archive.

Note that it is a common alternative in Wikipedia to have a section labelled External links (after the References) and list various links to other sites and to pages within them.

Because the Web is dynamic, it is possible that a web page used as a reference may become inactive. Do not remove such inactive references—even inactive, they still record the sources that were used. Make a note of the date that the original link was found to be inactive. If an Internet Archive copy of the page is known, add a link to that.

(See also: {{Cite web}}.)

[edit] Other-language wikipedias

Wikipedia is not a reliable source. When you use an article from a different-language Wikipedia as a reference, it belongs in the reference section. Use an external link rather than an interwiki link to avoid an unnecessary self-reference:

If you are getting some or all of your references second-hand, because you translated all or part of an article from a different-language Wikipedia, you may want to start your reference section (or part of it) with something like this (from Paragraph 175):

followed by a list of that different-language article's references.

[edit] Press releases

This is how to reference a press release:

If the press release is available online, make the title a link to the URL.

(See also: {{cite press release}})

[edit] Liner notes

This is how to reference the liner notes or sleeve notes of an album:

  • Author of notes (Copyright year). "Title of section in liner notes". In Title of album (pp. x-y) [Liner notes format]. City of recording company: Name of recording company.

An example:

  • Russell, Paul (2003). "Tangerine Dream Live in the 70s". In The Bootleg Box Set Vol. 1 [CD booklet]. London: Sanctuary Records Group.

A template for referencing liner notes is Template:Cite album-notes.

[edit] Combined with numbered footnotes

See for example Gymnopédie, an article using numbered footnotes (using the wikipedia:footnote3 system, which is now deprecated; Cite.php footnotes are now recommended) combined with book and journal references, as mentioned higher on this page. Other source citation techniques used on that same page: in-line external links, and, of course, wiki-links. Examples can be found at {{Ref/examples}}.

[edit] Notes

Example APA styles for many other document types can be found at the "Citation Style Guides" page. Ultimately, though, use your common sense — what information does the reader need in order to find the reference in question?

Page ranges should use an "en dash" (–, –), not a hyphen (-).

It is also useful to link author names to their Wikipedia page [if any], assuming that they have not already been linked to in the article text, to give background information on sources and other works they may have written.

[edit] Templates

See the summary of citation templates; for users familiar with the citation process, seeking a reference, a quick reference exists.

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