Help:Introduction to referencing with VisualEditor/1

From Bharatpedia, an open encyclopedia

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Verifiability
Why references are important

Adding references
Automatically or manually

Editing existing ones
Always room for improvement

Reusing references
Some are just really useful

Reliable sources
Which sources are good enough?

Summary
Review of what you've learned



A cartoon of a political rally, with someone in the crowd holding up a banner reading "[Citation needed]"
Users famously demand citations for facts! by Randall Munroe, xkcd.

One of the key policies of Bharatpedia is that all article content has to be verifiable. This means that reliable sources must be able to support the material. All quotations, any material whose verifiability has been challenged or is likely to be challenged, and contentious material (whether negative, positive, or neutral) about living persons must include an inline citation to a source that directly supports the material. This also means that Bharatpedia is not the place for original work, archival findings that have not been published, or evidence from any source that has not been published.


If you are adding new content, it is your responsibility to add sourcing information along with it. Material provided without a source is significantly more likely to be removed from an article. Sometimes such material will be tagged first with a "citation needed" template to give editors time to find and add sources before it is removed, but often editors will simply remove it because they question its veracity.


This tutorial will show you how to add inline citations to articles, and also briefly explain what Bharatpedia considers to be a reliable source.