Citing sources
This page in a nutshell: Wikipedia's Verifiability policy requires inline citations for any material challenged, or likely to be challenged, and for all quotations, anywhere in article space. |
Telling people where the information and facts that are put into articles comes from is an important part of Wikipedia. You should add a citation for the sources of information. To make a citation, or cite a fact means to quote by example, to give authority, and to provide proof.[1] This helps to make sure the facts are right and can be verified (checked to make sure that the information comes from somewhere and so is true) by the readers.
If someone sees that there is information in an article that does not have a source, then the information may be removed. If you see information that needs proof, tag the information with {{Fact|{{subst:DATE}}}}.
The sources used should be trustworthy and from a reliable source. The information should be distributed by a special group that is well-known for checking their own facts as well, making sure the information is correct or true.
On the article page, you should list in numerical order where the facts come from in a section called "References".
If you use citations inside the article paragraphs (this is preferred), then you need to set up the article references section with
Wikipedia:Citing Sources Media
References
Templates
Common templates
Using refToolbar
Cite4Wiki
When quoting someone
When writing about living persons
Circular sourcing
Text–source integrity
Do not add other facts or assertions into a fully cited paragraph or sentence:The sun is pretty big.[1] The sun is also quite hot.[2]
Notes
Include a source to support the new information. There are several ways to write this, including:The sun is pretty big, but the moon is not so big.[1] The sun is also quite hot.[2]
Notes
The sun is pretty big,[1] but the moon is not so big.[2] The sun is also quite hot.[3]
Notes
- ↑ Davis, Martin (2006). "The Church–Turing Thesis: Consensus and opposition", Proceedings, Computability in Europe 2006. Lecture notes in computer science, pp. 125–32.