Template:Cite isbn/doc

Usage
The purpose of this template is to help managing references to ISBN books on many different articles. You can include a citation by

using a 10-digit or 13-digit ISBN number without hyphens (-). After the reference has been filled once, you can include the same code on a variety of articles, all pointing to the same content. If you later change the book citation, e.g. including an URL, bibcode, or authorlinks to the respective articles, it is synchronized at once at all occurrences of your citation. Note that you can use hyphens in the  parameter of the cite book template itself for cleaner formatting, but when calling cite isbn you must not use hyphens.

This template is inspired by the cite doi template, but lacks its functionality to automatically fill out the citation, since such reliable services are not present or yet implemented for isbn numbers. Therefore you will have to create a cite book template yourself.

Editions with different page numbering can share the same isbn and there can be more than one isbn for the same book, so it is necessary to check the edition being referred to if reusing a citation definition. It is also possible for multiple books to share the same isbn, so be careful before reusing a citation definition.

There is no standard formatting of the citations that use this template at this time, unlike cite doi etc. that enforce things like initials only for first and middle names.


 * Optional parameters
 * page, pages, ref and year are passed to the book citation.


 * Removing the "edit" link

If you want to remove the "edit" link that this template places, add a second parameter with the text "noedit":

For example,

generates

whereas

generates

Technical details
Cite isbn works by transcluding a page from its subdirectory onto the respective article page. The name of this page is always the ISBN-13 number (ISBN-10 numbers are converted by adding 978 in front) with the last digit truncated (which is only a check digit and holds no information). Therefore, both corresponding isbn formats point to the same book.