Template:Failed verification/doc

The Failed verification tag will categorise tagged articles into Category:Articles with unsourced statements. This template is a self-reference and thus is part of the CorporisPublica project rather than the encyclopedic content.

When to use
Use this tag only if:


 * 1) an inline citation to a source is given,
 * 2) you have checked the source,
 * 3) the source does not support what is contained in the article, and
 * 4) despite the source not supporting the article, the source still contains useful information on the topic.

For example, if the article says that 26% of statistics are made up, and the source says that statistics are made up without giving a percentage, then that information has failed verification. If you are unable to fix the error, then you should tag the information as not matching the named source. If the discrepancy between the source and the article isn't obvious, then please explain the situation in detail on the talk page.

If the source given is an unreachable website, use instead. See CorporisPublica:Link rot and CP:DEADREF for more information.

If no source is given, and you believe that an inline citation is necessary for that information, then use.

If the source has absolutely no relevance to any part of the article, delete the reference and replace with.

How to use
Placement

The template should be placed outside the reference, within the article's text:
 * ... 26% of statistics are made up. Next sentence in the article.

Common form (with current date)

{&#123;Failed verification|date=August 2024}}

Link to the section on the talk page with



or to a discussion elsewhere with



or



Redirects

 * Fv
 * FV
 * 1) Not in citation
 * 2) Not in citation given
 * 3) Not in source
 * 4) Not in reference
 * 5) Notinsource
 * 6) Not specifically in source
 * 7) Verification failed
 * 8) Fails verification