This guide will help you identify elements to distinguish one kind of citation from another (a book from a journal article, for example). The citations below are in the APA style (7th edition), and the elements you should look out for (authors, editors, publication information...) will be present in some form in most common citation styles.
The animation above shows an article cited in the APA 6 format (view non-animated version).
To distinguish an article from other kinds of sources, look for:
Citations for articles accessed online often list the article's stable URL at the end of the citation:
With thanks to UC Berkeley Library
The animation above shows a book cited in the APA 6 format (view non-animated version).
To distinguish a book from other kinds of sources, look for:
With thanks to UC Berkeley Library
The animation above shows a single chapter from a book cited in the APA 7 format (view non-animated version).
To distinguish a book chapter from other kinds of sources, look for:
With thanks to UC Berkeley Library
Schultz, S. (2005, December 28). Calls made to strengthen state energy policies. The Country Today, pp. 1A, 2A.
Look for:
National Institute of Mental Health. (1990). Clinical training in serious mental illness (DHHS Publication No. ADM 90-1679). Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office.
Look for:
Engelshcall, R. S. (1997). Module mod_rewrite: URL Rewriting Engine. In Apache HTTP Server version 1.3 documentation (Apache modules). Retrieved from http://httpd.apache.org/docs/1.3/mod/mod_rewrite.html
Look for:
With thanks to UC Berkeley