This is referencing in the Harvard style. Much stylish.
Byrne, E. (2005) Game Level Design. Boston, Massachusetts. Charles River Media
Muthesius, H. (2010) "Art and the Machine" in Adamson, G (ed) The Craft Reader. New York. Berg. pp. 111 - 114.
S, Qu & K, Deng & L, Shi & Y, Cui. (2009) Effect of Direct In-cylinder CO2 Injection on HCCI Combustion And Emission Characteristics. Internation Journal of Automotive Technology. Volume 10 (Issue 5). pp 529 - 535.
S, Yu & L, Li. (2014) Effect of Fuel Metering on Combustion and Emissions of a PFE Gasoline Engine During Fast Startup Under an HEV-like Mode. International Journal of Automotive Technology. Volume 15 (Issue 5). pp 699 - 708.
Hi Ray,
ReplyDeleteThe leading hypen isn't needed: you'll find the bibliography looks better (and sorts properly) if each entry starts with the author surname. First names are conventionally replaced with the initial(s).
It isn't usual to give only the American state as the place of publication: if you check the Byrne item again, you should be able to find the city.
Note that "eds" denotes more than one editor: a single editor is "ed".
Hi Ray,
ReplyDeleteGood job on the update.
Don't forget to add a journal article retrieved using the Summon search tool.