Difference between revisions of "Template:Cite"
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<includeonly>{{#if:{{#pos:<noinclude>{{#tag:ref||name={{{1}}} <references /> }}</noinclude>|Cite error|0}} | <includeonly>{{#if:{{#pos:<noinclude>{{#tag:ref||name={{{1}}} <references /> }}</noinclude>|Cite error|0}} | ||
− | |{{#if:{{{2}}} | + | |{{#if:{{{2|}}} |
− | |{{#if:{{{3}}} | + | |{{#if:{{{3|}}} |
|{{#tag:ref|{{{2}}} - {{URL |{{{3}}} | Find at Cite-U-Like}} | name={{{1}}} }} | |{{#tag:ref|{{{2}}} - {{URL |{{{3}}} | Find at Cite-U-Like}} | name={{{1}}} }} | ||
|{{#tag:ref|{{{2}}} | name={{{1}}} }} | |{{#tag:ref|{{{2}}} | name={{{1}}} }} |
Revision as of 09:15, 24 September 2012
USAGE:
{{Cite | SHORTCUT NAME TO USE LATER | FULL NORMAL CITATION | CITE-U-LIKE LINK}}
It should be noted that this page does have a "references" at the bottom of it, but that is not part of the template, you will need to include a "<references />" at the end of your document
If you have already used this reference name once, then you can simply use the {{Cite | REF NAME}}
For those of you wanting to see how and why this works, please check the following pages (in no particular order): String Parsing, Parser Logic, Magic words for refs inside templates, includeonly and noinclude, to see why non-defined params are treated as whitespace, And understanding that the <!-- ... -> is the html equivalent of a comment and without it, the extra whitespace would be parsed into the template as well. The noinclude inside the #pos word is to ensure the citation is not done twice.
TEST This is a self consistent Test[1] ...and this is a break test [2] ...Test an id and cite without citulike [3]
...and a generic reftest[4] ...This should do the same thing [5]