User:Redrose64/Referencing Demo
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There are two main methods.
I first edited in April 2009; my first edit is recorded under an IP address. By late May I had found {{cite book}}
, it's used in my sixth edit although not to provide a true reference; by my eighth edit, I was using {{cite book}}
for proper references.
See also User:John Cardinal/Citation method comparison
Single-stage
[edit]Two-stage
[edit]The basic method is described at WP:CITESHORT although that implies that everything is done with plain text, no templates. I must have read one or more of the Help: and/or Wikipedia: pages dealing with citations, but can't remember which; but Wikipedia:Citation templates contains most of what I picked up here and there.
I discovered the means for making a two-stage reference actually link together after some weeks: I think that this edit was the first time, although it's linked, the method is primitive compared to the two methods I now favour. If we take the very first ref in Dave Pegg, the four methods for achieving this are:
<ref>[[#refHumphries1997|Humphries 1997]], p. 66</ref>
[1]<ref>[[#{{harvid|Humphries|1997}}|Humphries 1997]], p. 66</ref>
[2]<ref>{{harvnb|Humphries|1997|p=66}}</ref>
[3]{{sfn|Humphries|1997|p=66}}
[4]
- ^ Humphries 1997, p. 66
- ^ Humphries 1997, p. 66
- ^ Humphries 1997, p. 66
- ^ Humphries 1997, p. 66.
*{{cite book |first=P. |last=Humphries |title=Meet on the Ledge, Fairport Convention, the Classic Years |publisher= Virgin |edition=2nd |year=1997 |ref=refHumphries1997 }}
*{{cite book |first=P. |last=Humphries |title=Meet on the Ledge, Fairport Convention, the Classic Years |publisher= Virgin |edition=2nd |year=1997}}
- Humphries, P. (1997). Meet on the Ledge, Fairport Convention, the Classic Years (2nd ed.). Virgin.
- Humphries, P. (1997). Meet on the Ledge, Fairport Convention, the Classic Years (2nd ed.). Virgin.
Try clicking the [1] etc. also the "Humphries 1997, p. 66". The effect varies between browsers. the linking works in both IE7 and Mozilla Firefox 3.0/3.5; but in Firefox, it also shows up as a highlight.
I was still using method 1 when I created Abingdon Road Halt railway station at 12:12 on 22 September 2009, but by 19:31 the same day, had discovered methods 3 & 4 pretty much simultaneously, and used the latter when creating Hinksey Halt railway station. Method 2 is a comparatively recent development, the {{harvid}}
template having been created 13 December 2009. I used method 3 in Dave Pegg; whilst {{sfn}}
does something similar to <ref>
(they take exactly the same parameters and prodice exactly the same effect), but can puzzle people looking for {{harvnb}}
</ref><ref>
; however it is quicker to type, and much easier to handle when it comes to duplicate refs. Consider the same page cited twice. Using {{harvnb}}
we would do this:
you need to think of a name, and
but {{sfn}}
cuts out the duplication worry:
- ^ a b Humphries 1997, p. 66
- ^ a b Humphries 1997, p. 66.
These days I judge the individual articles on the basis of how many facts come from different pages in the same book: if there are only three or fewer, single-stage referencing is OK; but four or more, I do it two-stage. If I use two-stage, whether I use method 2 or 3 depends mainly on whether it all comes from books (method 3) or if there is a fair proportion of anonymous web pages (method 2).
Reading Southern railway station was the western terminus of the South Eastern Railway's route from Redhill.[1] In the station's final arrangement, there were four platforms;[2]
- ^ Pre-Grouping Atlas, p. 4, section A2
- ^ Godfrey 1994.
- British Railways Pre-Grouping Atlas and Gazetteer (Map) (5th ed.). 1" = 8 miles. Cartography by W. Philip Conolly. Ian Allan. 1976. ISBN 0 7110 0320 3.
- Berkshire Sheet 37.03: Reading 1898 (Map). 1:4340. Old Ordnance Survey Maps: The Godfrey Edition. Alan Godfrey Maps. 1994. ISBN 0-85054-703-2.