"Children's Books Wiki:References"@en . "Here's my guide to how to add a reference. \n* Firstly, click \"edit this page\". Then click \"source\". You can see where this is on the image: \n* This page will open up: \n* Reading the image, you can see after \"albino\", some code. This is the reference. The code is . After putting this, you type your reference text. Just use normal links, and so on \u2013 everything is normal. When you've finished, put . And there you go, one reference. Everything inside the tags is the reference. Everything outside them is the normal page. \n* One more thing to do. You need to insert the list of references at the bottom of the page. To do this, put the heading \"references\" (in source mode, it's ==References==). Then, underneath your heading, put . And when you click save page,"@en . "Here's my guide to how to add a reference. \n* Firstly, click \"edit this page\". Then click \"source\". You can see where this is on the image: \n* This page will open up: \n* Reading the image, you can see after \"albino\", some code. This is the reference. The code is . After putting this, you type your reference text. Just use normal links, and so on \u2013 everything is normal. When you've finished, put . And there you go, one reference. Everything inside the tags is the reference. Everything outside them is the normal page. \n* One more thing to do. You need to insert the list of references at the bottom of the page. To do this, put the heading \"references\" (in source mode, it's ==References==). Then, underneath your heading, put . And when you click save page, there you go \u2013 your very own reference. Isn't it sweet? :) 16:37, April 12, 2010 (UTC)"@en . .