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In publishing, a note is a brief text in which the author comments on the subject and themes of the book and names supporting citations.In the editorial production of books and documents, typographically, a note is usually several lines of text at the bottom of the page, at the end of a chapter, at the end of a volume, or a house-style typographic usage throughout the text.
Note: The advice to "say where you read it" does not mean that you have to give credit to any search engines, websites, libraries, library catalogs, archives, subscription services, bibliographies, or other sources that led you to Smith's book. If you have read a book or article yourself, that's all you have to cite.
An explanatory note template such as {} is used inside <ref>...</ref> tags; use {} instead of <ref>...</ref> tags. Footnotes are nested inside list-defined references . This is a known bug, for now just do not use list-defined references.
Note that these are not hard rules, and that sources needs to be always evaluated in the context of the article's subject: Editorial oversight —A publication with a declared editorial policy will have greater reliability than one without, since the content is subject to verification.
Note the difference between unsourced material and original research: Unsourced material is material not yet attributed to a reliable source. It is unattributed but may be attributable. Original research is material that cannot be attributed to a reliable source. It is unattributable.
Meier outlines a formula for writing an impactful thank you note, as described in her book Modern Etiquette Made Easy, and recommends a note be one to two paragraphs in length. 1. Date and Salutation.
Note: If the note's text has a reference name that is used more than once, the labels will still match, but the clickable alpha characters (superscript lowercase letters like a b c) that toggle the note's display [vague] will be next to the note's label, with links to the multiple locations of its marker in the main text.
This template is used to create footnotes in Wikipedia, as an alternative and complement to the <ref> tag. Template parameters [Edit template data] This template prefers inline formatting of parameters. Parameter Description Type Status content 1 refn The content of the footnote. Content required name name The name of the footnote. Corresponds to the "name" attribute of the <ref> tag. String ...