:User:Mike Peel/References guide
This is a guide to the various referencing systems available on Wikipedia, put together by User:Mike Peel. If anything is missing from it, please feel free to add to this page, or please let the author know.
The aim of this guide is to give a good introduction to (and provide a reference for) the technical aspects of referencing on Wikipedia. It does not tell you what references you should use, or where you should use them. See Wikipedia:Citing sources for that.
Referencing systems
There are three main referencing systems in use on Wikipedia: Footnotes, Wikipedia:Harvard referencing and embedded citations.
Note that all three consist of two parts - a reference in-line with the text, with full details of the reference at the bottom of the page. It is a common mistake to only put one half of the reference onto the page - just the URL, in the case of embedded citations, or just the full reference, in the case of Harvard references.
= Footnotes =
{{see|Wikipedia:Footnotes}}
: This is my prefered referencing system
A reference can be inserted into the text by placing
The second part of this referencing system is a
This can be inserted using the links in the "Wiki markup" section at the bottom of the edit page.
= Harvard referencing =
{{see|Wikipedia:Harvard referencing}}
{{seealso|Template:Harvard reference|Template:Harvard citation}}
A Harvard reference can be inserted into an article by placing the author and year of the reference in-line with the text, for example (Peel 2006), followed by the complete details of the reference in the References section of the page. Note that both parts of this referencing system should be used - a common mistake I see on many articles is a big list of references at the bottom of the page, and no inline references to say what part of the article can be verified using which reference.
= Embedded citations =
{{see|Wikipedia:Embedded Citations}}
: Note that I do not recommend using this system - it is very easy to misuse if you don't know it well, and as such it is frequently mis-used throughout Wikipedia.
This is mostly used for referencing websites in-line in an article. It is probably one of the most common of the referencing systems used on Wikipedia, although it is frequently used incorrectly. The references consist of two parts: an external link located in-line with the text, such as [http://www.example.org] <-- that. This is done by placing
How do I cite...
Note: use of these templates is not required, but is prefered by me (and, hopefully, others...)
= A book =
{{see|Template:Cite book}}
Copyable version:
{{cite book | last= | first= | authorlink= | coauthors= | title= | year= | publisher= | location= | id= ISBN | pages= }}
Available options:
{{cite book| last=
| first=
| authorlink=
| coauthors=
| editor=
| others=
| title= REQUIRED
| origdate=
| origyear=
| origmonth=
| url=
| format=
| accessdate=
| accessyear=
| accessmonth=
| edition=
| date=
| year=
| month=
| publisher=
| location=
| language=
| id= ISBN ...
| doi =
| pages=
| chapter=
| chapterurl=
| quote =
}}
An example would be:
{{cite book | last=Misner | first = Charles | coauthors = Thorne, Kip S. and Wheeler, John Archibald | title=Gravitation | location=San Francisco | publisher= W. H. Freeman | year=1973 | id=ISBN 0-7167-0344-0}}
which gives:
- {{cite book | last=Misner | first = Charles | coauthors = Thorne, Kip S. and Wheeler, John Archibald | title=Gravitation | location=San Francisco | publisher= W. H. Freeman | year=1973 | isbn = 0-7167-0344-0 }}
= A journal =
{{see|Template:Cite journal}}
Copyable version:
{{cite journal | last= | first= | authorlink= | coauthors= | year= | month= | title= | journal= | volume= | issue= | pages= | issn= | arxiv= | doi= | id= | url= }}
Available options:
{{cite journal| last = Surname of the author
| first = Forename or initials of the author
| author = Name of the author (use either this, or first & last)
| authorlink = Name of the Wikipedia page on the author
| coauthors = The coauthors of the article
| year = The year the article was published
| month = The month the article was published
| title = REQUIRED. The title of the article
| journal = The journal the article was published in
| volume = The volume of the journal containing the article
| issue = The issue of the journal containing the article
| pages = The pages of the journal that are occupied by the article
| issn = The ISSN of the journal
| arxiv = The arXiv of the article
| doi = The DOI of the article
| id = Other IDs of the article
| url = The URL of the article online
| format = The format of the article (PDF, etc.) - HTML implied if missing
| accessdate = The accessdate of the article. In 2006-08-31 format.
| quotes = "quotes=no" removes the quotation marks around the title. Leave blank otherwise
}}
The {{para|arxiv}} field can be used to provide a link to the arXiv version of the article. This should only be used when the article has been published in a journal - for unpublished arXiv works, {{tl|Cite arXiv}} should be used (see below). It is useful to provide a link to the arXiv citation if possible, as the arXiv is freely available to everyone, whereas journals typically require expensive subscriptions to access them.
An example of a paper that has not been published in arXiv would be:
{{cite journal | last=Kerr | first = R. P. | title=Gravitational field of a spinning mass as an example of algebraically special metrics | journal=Phys. Rev. Lett. | year=1963 | volume=11 | pages=237}}
which gives:
- {{cite journal | author=Kerr, R. P. | title=Gravitational field of a spinning mass as an example of algebraically special metrics | journal=Phys. Rev. Lett. | year=1963 | volume=11 | issue=5 | pages=237–238| doi=10.1103/PhysRevLett.11.237 }}
An example of a paper that has previously been published in arXiv would be:
{{cite journal | last=Bicak | first=Jiri | title=Selected exact solutions of Einstein's field equations: their role in general relativity and astrophysics | journal=Lect. Notes Phys. | year=2000 | volume=540 | pages=1—126 | arxiv=gr-qc/0004016 }}
which gives:
- {{cite journal | last=Bicak | first=Jiri | title=Selected exact solutions of Einstein's field equations: their role in general relativity and astrophysics | journal=Lect. Notes Phys. | year=2000 | volume=540 | pages=1–126 | arxiv=gr-qc/0004016 }}
= arXiv =
{{see|Template:Cite arXiv}}
= A conference report or paper =
{{see|Template:Cite conference}}
= A news article =
{{see|Template:Cite news}}
= A website =
{{see|Template:Cite web}}
= An encyclopaedia =
{{see|Template:Cite encyclopedia}}
= A newsgroup posting =
{{see|Template:Cite newsgroup}}
= A paper, thesis or dissertation =
{{see|Template:Cite paper}}
= A press release =
{{see|Template:Cite press release}}
= A video =
{{see|Template:Cite video}}
= A comic book =
{{see|Template:Comic book reference}}
= A comic strip =
{{see|Template:Comic strip reference}}
= An editorial cartoon =
{{see|Template:Editorial cartoon reference}}
= A MacTutor biography =
{{see|Template:MacTutor Biography}}
Common problems
;A link appears malformed
This can occur when you put a new line into the description field for the URL. For example (see source):
website}}
which gives:
{{cite web | url = http://www.example.org | title = brown
fox}}
This is caused by an inability in the MediaWiki software to handle new lines in the middle of external links (see [http://bugzilla.wikimedia.org/show_bug.cgi?id=7090]).