Author. Title of the article (China Literature). Name, year (issue) of the periodical
Author. Title (China Literature). Press, year of publication, number of pages.
Author. Title of the article (Foreign Literature). Name, year (issue) of the periodical
Author. The title of the book (foreign literature). Press, year of publication, number of pages.
Each document corresponds to only one serial number; When the title of the document is the same as other contents, but the page number is different, the page number can be marked after the indicating serial number in the text, such as [1]85, such as [1] 153, such as [1]226.
According to ISO 690 and ISO 690-2, each reference entry ends with a ".".
The reference part of the article includes notes and references. Annotation is the author's own explanation (the cited references can also be put in the annotation), and the reference only needs to list the name of the reference book or paper, the author, the publishing house or published periodical, the writing time or the number of periodical issues, etc. Notes are marked with a circle of 1 2, and references are marked with [1][2].
Some publications require annotations and references in the text, while others do not require references in the text, just list them in the endnotes. According to the latest CNKI specification, the former should be marked. For the sake of safety, you should mark all references. Note: If the reference is a book, the paper only needs to indicate the publication of the journal.
Example:
References:
[1] Jin Fuhai. On the establishment of punitive damages system in China [J]. China Law, 1994, (3).
[2] Yang Lixin. Reflections on "Wang Hai Phenomenon" in Civil Law —— Also on punitive damages in the protection of consumers' rights and interests [J]. Hebei law, 1997, (5).
[3] Jin Fuhai. On consumer law [M]. Beijing: Peking University Publishing House, 2005:25 1.