Template:Cite journal/doc



cite journal is for formatting references to articles in academic journals in a consistent and legible manner. It can be used at the end of the article, directly in the References section. It can also be placed within tags for in-line citations (see w:Wikipedia:Footnotes).

Usage
Copyable version:


 * author: Author
 * last works with first to produce
 * authorlink works either with author or with last & first to link to the appropriate article (internal link)
 * coauthors: allows additional authors
 * date: January 1, 2006. Full date of publication.
 * year: 2006. Year of publication (ignored if the date field is used).
 * month: January. Month of publication (ignored if the date field is used, or if the year field is not used).
 * title: Title of article. This is the only required parameter. All other parameters are optional.
 * journal: Name of the journal.
 * volume: Volume number of the journal in which the article is found
 * issue: Issue number of the journal in which the article is found
 * pages:  45–47 : first page, and optional last page.
 * doi: digital object identifier. See also doi
 * id: Identifier such as  ,
 * other suitable id-related templates: doi, US patent
 * url: URL of a copy of the article, if available online.
 * format: Format, i.e. PDF. Don't specify for HTML (implied as default).
 * accessdate: Full date when URL was accessed, in ISO 8601 YYYY-MM-DD format, eg. 2006-02-17.
 * quotes: Specify "quotes=no" to disable the quotes around the title. If "quotes" is not defined or set to the empty string, the template emits quotes around the title (default).

Examples









 * You can use the doi template in the ID parameter to provide an ISBN-like functionality:




 * You can also specify the doi directly: