Want to keep things honest. Trying to do my part not to burn up the planet that we live. A good steward leaves things better than they found them.
Other interests include: history, geography, languages, energy, energy conservation, clean air & car tint. ——Tintdepotcom (talk) 01:07, 5 December 2019 (UTC)
As a new user, I am trying out how to properly use citations. [1] Tintdepotcom (talk) 18:48, 6 December 2019 (UTC)
And furthermore, if I have multiple citations there is a way to do that as can be seen below:
For multiple use of the same inline citation or footnote, you can use the named references feature, choosing a name to identify the inline citation, and typing [2]. Thereafter, the same named reference may be reused any number of times either before or after the defining use by typing the previous reference name, like this: [2]. The use of the slash before the > means that the tag is self-closing, and the </ref> used to close other references must not be used in addition.
The text of the name can be almost anything—apart from being completely numeric. If spaces are used in the text of the name, the text must be placed within double quotes. Placing all named references within double quotes may be helpful to future editors who do not know that rule. To help with page maintenance, it is recommended that the text of the name have a connection to the inline citation or footnote, for example "author year page": [3].
Use straight quotation marks " to enclose the reference name. Do not use curly quotation marks “”. Curly marks are treated as another character, not as delimiters. The page will display an error if one style of quotation marks is used when first naming the reference, and the other style is used in a repeated reference, or if a mix of styles is used in the repeated references. Cite error: There are <ref>
tags on this page without content in them (see the help page).For multiple use of the same inline citation or footnote, you can use the named references feature, choosing a name to identify the inline citation, and typing [2]. Thereafter, the same named reference may be reused any number of times either before or after the defining use by typing the previous reference name, like this: [2]. The use of the slash before the > means that the tag is self-closing, and the </ref> used to close other references must not be used in addition.
Tintdepotcom (talk) 18:53, 6 December 2019 (UTC)