සැකිල්ල:SfnRef
CITEREF
Generate an identifier suitable as an anchor for a Harvard citation. This template, which can be used with either the name {SfnRef}
or the name {harvid}
, is intended to be paired with Harvard citation templates such as {Sfn}, {harv}, and {harvnb}. This templates uses the same arguments as the other citation templates. As explained below, this template is needed only in some cases when the Harvard citation templates are used.
Usage
{SfnRef|Last name of author(s)|Year}
or
{harvid|Last name of author(s)|Year}
The first parameter is the first author's last name. Up to four authors can be given as parameters; if there are more than four authors, list only the first four. The last parameter is the year of publication, possibly with a letter suffixed to avoid ambiguity if there are multiple citations by the same set of authors in the same year.
All named parameters such as |p=
are ignored.
Purpose
This template creates the proper value for the |ref=
parameter for use with {cite journal}, {cite book}, {citation}, and the other templates implemented via {citation/core}, and for use by {vcite journal}, {vcite book} and other templates that generate Vancouver system references. It is intended to be paired with {Sfn} and uses the same arguments. As explained below, {SfnRef}
/{harvid}
is only necessary in a subset of the cases where {Sfn}
is used.
{Sfn}
creates a short footnote that is linked to a full footnote. {Sfn}
creates the link automatically, but the full footnote must be assigned the proper ID value to be a valid target for that link.
When using the {citation/core}
family of citation templates, the ID is created via the |ref=
parameter. In most cases, the parameter should be coded as |ref=harv
: this generates the ID from the last names of the first four authors. This parameter setting is not needed for {citation}, which defaults to |ref=harv
. However, if |last1=
etc. are not used, such as when the author of the source is unknown and the short footnote specifies an organization name, |ref=harv
will not create the proper ID value. In those cases, use {SfnRef}
to create the proper value without having to know the rules for how {Sfn}
creates the ID.
The {vcite journal} etc. templates (with "vcite
", not "cite
") do not support |ref=harv
and require the use of {SfnRef}
/{harvid}
to work with Harvard citations.
Examples
- With the shortened footnote template
When citing an article published in the December 2004 edition of Rolling Stone where the author is unknown, you might create a short footnote as follows:
{Sfn|Rolling Stone|2004}
|ref=harv
will not work in this case because "Rolling Stone" is not the name of the author. You may code the value for the |ref=
parameter manually, or you can use {SfnRef}
and specify the same parameters as used with {Sfn}
:
{SfnRef|Rolling Stone|2004}
The full footnote:
{cite news |work=[[Rolling Stone]] |title=The RS 500 Greatest Songs of All Time |ref={SfnRef|Rolling Stone|2004} |date=December 2004}
You can copy and paste the {Sfn}
template code and change the name of the template from "Sfn" to "SfnRef". If your short footnote includes page numbers such as {Sfn|Rolling Stone|2004|p=48}
, you can copy and paste it to create {SfnRef|Rolling Stone|2004|p=48}
; the |p=48
parameter is not necessary but will do no harm.
- With other Harvard templates
For example, a References section might contain the following markup:
{vcite journal |author=Peh WC, Ng KH |title=Preparing the references |journal=Singapore Med J |volume=50 |issue=7 |pages=659–61 |year=2009 |pmid=19644619 |url=http://smj.sma.org.sg/5007/5007emw1.pdf |format=PDF |ref={harvid|Peh|Ng|2009} }
This markup uses {harvid|Peh|Ng|2009}
to generate the anchor identifier "CITEREFPehNg2009", used internally to link Harvard references to citations. (This identifier is not visible to the article's reader.) The generated citation looks like this:
- Peh WC, Ng KH. Preparing the references [PDF]. Singapore Med J. 2009;50(7):659–61. PMID 19644619.
Article prose can link to this citation with markup like the following:
{harv|Peh|Ng|2009}
which generates the following:
To see how it works, click on the "(Peh & Ng 2009)".