Help:Introduction to referencing with Wiki Markup/2: Difference between revisions

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Reverted 1 edit by Moise Vasilica (talk): Rv test edit / misplaced draft (?). (TW)
Little blue numbers are not the only form of inline citation
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If you've read many Wikipedia articles, then you'll have seen plenty of inline citations. These are usually small numbered footnotes which link to a full source in a reference section when clicked, like this.,<ref>{{cite book|last=Wales|first=J|title=What is an inline citation?|year=2012|publisher=Wikipublisher|pages=6}}</ref> although [[Wikipedia:Inline citations|sometimes other styles are used]]. They are generally added directly after the fact they support, or at the end of the sentence after any punctuation.
 
When editing a page using the popular footnotes style, inline citations are usually between <code><nowiki><ref></nowiki></code> and <code><nowiki></ref></nowiki></code> tags.
 
All the references then appear together on the page, wherever the {{tl|Reflist}} template or <code><nowiki><references /></nowiki></code> tag is present. This will usually be in a section titled "References". If you are creating a brand new page, or adding references to a page that didn't previously have any, don't forget to add a references section like the one below, or the citations you went to all that effort adding won't show up.