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Help:Introduction to referencing with Wiki Markup/2

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Verifiability
Why references are important

Inline citations
How to add them

RefToolbar
Citations the easy way

Reliable sources
Which sources are good enough?

Summary
Review of what you've learned




A screencast that walks through the essentials of citing your sources (2:01 min)

Inline citations are usually small, numbered footnotes like this.[1] An inline citation appears directly after a specific fact it supports, or at the end of a sentence, group of sentences, or paragraph that it supports. When clicked, they take the reader to a full source near the bottom of the article.


When editing a page using the popular (most common) footnote style, inline citations are usually placed <ref>...</ref> tags. Note the closing slash ("/") in the second tag.


The information within references is displayed together in one place on a page, wherever <references/> or, most commonly, the template {{Reflist}} is present. This will usually be in a section titled "References". If you are creating a new page, or adding references to a page that didn't previously have any, remember to add a References section like the one below. The Manual of Style describes where to place such a section.

== References ==
{{Reflist}}


Note: This is by far the most popular system for inline citations, but sometimes you will find other styles being used in an article, such as references in parentheses. As a general rule, the first major contributor to an article gets to choose the referencing system used there. If an article uses a different system than the one you're used to, just copy an existing reference when adding any new reference, then modify it appropriately; don't mix styles.

References
  1. ^ Wales, J (2025). What is an inline citation?. Wikipublisher. p. 6.