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Articles continue with the main text or body, which summarizes parts of the topic. At the bottom of an article you will find references that show where information in the article came from, so you can check the information from the article yourself. These sections might also contain links to other websites that have more resources.
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these are two words; only the first transition divides such words, into two; a null space matches non-alphanumerics: game-folks matches gameFolks. for or digit-letter these match singly or together. In other words you don't need the space, but that also works to find either "word" of a camel case or mixed alphanumeric word.
The talk page may have a banner indicating which variety is already established, or the article may have a template like {{Use British English}} at the top of the wikitext. Most web browsers have built-in spellchecking. You can use external websites or software to check for errors. If you want to focus only on misspellings, these tools are handy:
This category combines all articles which have words, phrases or sentences needing attribution and have been marked by the inline template {{Attribution needed}}.This template requests in-text attribution or an inline citation for perspectives and opinions that the Wikipedia article asserts is held by someone, but you don't know who holds the view.
A source that is likely to be accepted by editors for most normal uses in an article, due to its generally desirable characteristics, such as a reputation for fact-checking and accuracy: Before you start the article, see if you can find some reliable sources. See Wikipedia:Reliable sources (shortcut: WP:RS). Rename
All the functions performed by a trained librarian employed in the reference section of a library to meet the information needs of patrons (in person, by telephone, or electronically), including but not limited to answering substantive questions, instructing users in the selection and use of appropriate tools and techniques for finding ...
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