User:Milton Beychok/Sandbox: Difference between revisions

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'''''<u>This is how to code the edit page of an article using "List-Defined References"&thinsp;:</u>'''''
'''''<u>This is how to code the edit page of an article using "List-Defined References"&thinsp;:</u>'''''


The Sun is a large dwarf star<font color=purple><nowiki><ref name=Jones2005p35/></nowiki></font> in our solar system which has 8 planets and other celestial bodies revolving around it.<font color=purple><nowiki><ref name=Jones2005p23/></nowiki></font> It is extremely hot, with surface temperatures in excess of 5,000 °C and a central core temperature greater than 10,000,000 °C.<font color=purple><nowiki><ref name=Jones2005p23/></nowiki></font>  
The Sun is a large dwarf star<font color=green><nowiki><ref name=Jones2005p35/></nowiki></font> in our solar system which has 8 planets and other celestial bodies revolving around it.<font color=green><nowiki><ref name=Jones2005p23/></nowiki></font> It is extremely hot, with surface temperatures in excess of 5,000 °C and a central core temperature greater than 10,000,000 °C.<font color=green><nowiki><ref name=Jones2005p23/></nowiki></font>  


Since the Sun is about 150,000,000 kilometers from the Earth,<font color=purple><nowiki><ref name=Jones2005p35/></nowiki></font> only a very small amount of its heat and light reach the Earth. By contrast, the Earth's moon is very much smaller and very much colder.<font color=purple><nowiki><ref name=Kelly2001/></nowiki></font>
Since the Sun is about 150,000,000 kilometers from the Earth,<font color=green><nowiki><ref name=Jones2005p35/></nowiki></font> only a very small amount of its heat and light reach the Earth. By contrast, the Earth's moon is very much smaller and very much colder.<font color=green><nowiki><ref name=Kelly2001/></nowiki></font>


'''<nowiki>==References==</nowiki>'''
'''<nowiki>==References==</nowiki>'''
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<nowiki>{{reflist|refs=</nowiki>
<nowiki>{{reflist|refs=</nowiki>


<font color=purple><nowiki><ref name=Jones2005p23></nowiki></font><nowiki>{{cite book | author=Edward Jones, William Smith and George Jackson | title=The Solar System's Sun | edition= 4th Edition | publisher=Thompson Publishing Co. | date=September 1998 | pages=pp. 23-28 | id=ISBN 4-3782-5673-1}}</ref></nowiki>
<font color=green><nowiki><ref name=Jones2005p23></nowiki></font><nowiki>{{cite book | author=Edward Jones, William Smith and George Jackson | title=The Solar System's Sun | edition= 4th Edition | publisher=Thompson Publishing Co. | date=September 1998 | pages=pp. 23-28 | id=ISBN 4-3782-5673-1}}</ref></nowiki>


<font color=purple><nowiki><ref name=Jones2005p35></nowiki></font><nowiki>{{cite book | author=Edward Jones, William Smith and George Jackson | title=The Solar System's Sun | edition= 4th Edition | publisher=Thompson Publishing Co. | date=September 1998 | pages=pp. 35-45 | id=ISBN 4-3782-5673-1}}</ref></nowiki>
<font color=green><nowiki><ref name=Jones2005p35></nowiki></font><nowiki>{{cite book | author=Edward Jones, William Smith and George Jackson | title=The Solar System's Sun | edition= 4th Edition | publisher=Thompson Publishing Co. | date=September 1998 | pages=pp. 35-45 | id=ISBN 4-3782-5673-1}}</ref></nowiki>


<font color=purple><nowiki><ref name=Kelly2001></nowiki></font><nowiki>{{cite journal | author=Thomas Page, William Wood and John Isher | title= Lunar Surface Temperatures and the Stability of Polar Ice Deposits | journal= Solar System Astronomy | volume=32 | issue=4 |pages=pp. 179-195 | date= February 2001}}</ref></nowiki><br/>
<font color=green><nowiki><ref name=Kelly2001></nowiki></font><nowiki>{{cite journal | author=Thomas Page, William Wood and John Isher | title= Lunar Surface Temperatures and the Stability of Polar Ice Deposits | journal= Solar System Astronomy | volume=32 | issue=4 |pages=pp. 179-195 | date= February 2001}}</ref></nowiki><br/>
}}
}}



Revision as of 01:48, 8 May 2011

This is how to code the edit page of an article using "List-Defined References" :

The Sun is a large dwarf star<ref name=Jones2005p35/> in our solar system which has 8 planets and other celestial bodies revolving around it.<ref name=Jones2005p23/> It is extremely hot, with surface temperatures in excess of 5,000 °C and a central core temperature greater than 10,000,000 °C.<ref name=Jones2005p23/>

Since the Sun is about 150,000,000 kilometers from the Earth,<ref name=Jones2005p35/> only a very small amount of its heat and light reach the Earth. By contrast, the Earth's moon is very much smaller and very much colder.<ref name=Kelly2001/>

==References==

{{reflist|refs=

<ref name=Jones2005p23>{{cite book | author=Edward Jones, William Smith and George Jackson | title=The Solar System's Sun | edition= 4th Edition | publisher=Thompson Publishing Co. | date=September 1998 | pages=pp. 23-28 | id=ISBN 4-3782-5673-1}}</ref>

<ref name=Jones2005p35>{{cite book | author=Edward Jones, William Smith and George Jackson | title=The Solar System's Sun | edition= 4th Edition | publisher=Thompson Publishing Co. | date=September 1998 | pages=pp. 35-45 | id=ISBN 4-3782-5673-1}}</ref>

<ref name=Kelly2001>{{cite journal | author=Thomas Page, William Wood and John Isher | title= Lunar Surface Temperatures and the Stability of Polar Ice Deposits | journal= Solar System Astronomy | volume=32 | issue=4 |pages=pp. 179-195 | date= February 2001}}</ref>
}}


This is what the above coding produces on the article page :

The Sun is a large dwarf star[1] in our solar system which has 8 planets and other celestial bodies revolving around it.[2] It is extremely hot, with surface temperatures in excess of 5,000 °C and a central core temperature greater than 10,000,000 °C.[2]

Since the Sun is about 150,000,000 kilometers from the Earth,[1] only a very small amount of its heat and light reach the Earth. By contrast, the Earth's moon is very much smaller and very much colder.[3]

==References==

  1. 1.0 1.1 Edward Jones, William Smith and George Jackson (September 1998). The Solar System's Sun, 4th Edition. Thompson Publishing Co., pp. 35-45. ISBN 4-3782-5673-1. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 Edward Jones, William Smith and George Jackson (September 1998). The Solar System's Sun, 4th Edition. Thompson Publishing Co., pp. 23-28. ISBN 4-3782-5673-1. 
  3. Thomas Page, William Wood and John Isher (February 2001). "Lunar Surface Temperatures and the Stability of Polar Ice Deposits". Solar System Astronomy 32 (4): pp. 179-195.