Template:Find sources: Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 09:37, 16 April 2014
Find sources: "Example" – books⧼dot-separator⧽scholar⧼dot-separator⧽JSTOR⧼dot-separator⧽free images
This is the {{Find sources}} source search template. It uses the Template:Find sources multi meta-template. |
This template produces a series of links to various search interfaces to help find additional reference material for articles. It is based on the {{find sources multi}} meta-template. This template should not be used in articles themselves - see Wikipedia:EL#Links normally to be avoided.
Usage
The first parameter is the main search term, which will be treated as a literal string if multi-part (e.g. Albert Einstein
will be searched as the single string "Albert Einstein" not "Albert" and "Einstein" separately).
Optional subsequent parameters (up to 4) are additional search terms. They can be enclosed in double quotation marks, preceded by an unspaced -
(hyphen) to exclude them from the search results, or both (e.g. -"Marilyn Monroe"
to exclude matches containing the phrase "Marilyn Monroe", but not either name by itself, from the search results). You do not need to add -wikipedia
, as the template automatically does this for you. Also, there is no need to add words in plural form unless irregular, as the search interface will match (for example) billiards as well given a search term of billiard.
If no parameters are given, the name of the article is passed as the search string. Note that this may or may not be desirable with disambiguated article names (if the Wikipedia disambiguator is sensible, however, it may actually help refine the search results).
Search engines
The template includes links to the following search engines:
- Google, the flagship search engine from Google Inc.
- Google Books, Google's search engine for books.
- Google Scholar, Google's search engine for academic papers and other scholarly research.
- JSTOR, an online library containing digitised versions of academic journals. Requires a subscription.
- Google Images, Google's search engine for images. Only images compatible with Wikipedia's licensing are included.
Examples
- Default search:
{{Find sources}}
- produces:
- Find sources: "Find sources" – books⧼dot-separator⧽scholar⧼dot-separator⧽JSTOR⧼dot-separator⧽free images
- Simple search:
{{Find sources|Albert Einstein}}
- produces:
- Find sources: "Albert Einstein" – books⧼dot-separator⧽scholar⧼dot-separator⧽JSTOR⧼dot-separator⧽free images
- Complex search:
{{Find sources|Albert Einstein|physics|-"Marilyn Monroe"|relativity|science}}
- produces:
- Find sources: "Albert Einstein" physics -"Marilyn Monroe" relativity science – books⧼dot-separator⧽scholar⧼dot-separator⧽JSTOR⧼dot-separator⧽free images
See also
- {{Find sources notice}} - styled article talk header template for article talk pages
- {{Find sources 2}} - template with more free searches
- {{Find sources 3}} - template with many more sources to search.
- {{Find sources 4}} - template with even more sources to search.
- {{find video game sources}} - includes a link to Gwern's Google RS
- {{Refideas}} - template to include links to possible sources
- {{Search}} - the original search template on which this template was based
- {{Search for}} - a multi-purpose search engine sidebar
- Wikipedia:WikiProject User scripts/Scripts/Search links
- WP:Find
- Wikipedia:Template messages/Cleanup/Verifiability and sources
This documentation is automatically generated by Template:Find sources multi/template. Any categories and documentation specific to this template should be added to the template's /doc subpage. Editors can experiment in this template's sandbox (create | mirror) and testcases (create) pages. |