Difference between revisions of "HymnWiki:Sources"

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*Posted lyrics
 
*Posted lyrics
  
Please, please, please! do not post lyrics without posting a legal source for those lyrics (unless you wrote them yourself, in which case you should tell us so). We need to be able to distinguish between the lyrics of various hymnals (they are not always the same—and if they are, heed this anyway).
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'''Please!''' do not post lyrics without posting a source for those lyrics (unless you wrote them yourself, in which case you should tell us so). We need to be able to distinguish between the lyrics of various hymnals (they are not always the same—and if they are, heed this anyway). Our goal is not to be efficient with the lyrics posted.
  
 
You should include the full title, publication date, and hymn or page number of all sources: e.g. Hymns of Faith and Fortitude, 1909, no. 37
 
You should include the full title, publication date, and hymn or page number of all sources: e.g. Hymns of Faith and Fortitude, 1909, no. 37

Revision as of 00:55, 7 February 2009

Create proper and useful sources for everything you post. The things you post may include such as the following:

  • Composers
  • Lyricists
  • Hymn publication dates
  • Birth and death dates of hymnists
  • Posted sheet music (or list yourself as the contributer, if you made it)
  • Posted lyrics

Please! do not post lyrics without posting a source for those lyrics (unless you wrote them yourself, in which case you should tell us so). We need to be able to distinguish between the lyrics of various hymnals (they are not always the same—and if they are, heed this anyway). Our goal is not to be efficient with the lyrics posted.

You should include the full title, publication date, and hymn or page number of all sources: e.g. Hymns of Faith and Fortitude, 1909, no. 37

Make the source a link to an online copy of it, if available (such can often be found through Google Books or Openlibrary.org).

To create a source with footnotes, use the following tags to create a footnote linking to your source: <ref>Whatever your source is</ref>. Then, under a heading for references or footnotes (create one if there is none: i.e. =References= on its own line), put the following tag and nothing else: <references/>

Example

=Lyrics=
*Poet: FirstName LastName (year range), publication date<ref>publicationDateSourceTitle, dateOfSource, pageNumberOfSource</ref>
==Lyrics from [hymnalURL hymnalTitle, dateHymnalWasPublished, pageNumberOrHymnNumber]==


=References=
<references/>