Category:CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of September 2024
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This category lists pages that have cs1|2 templates that use |doi=
, where a digital object identifier doi value has been specified but then recognized as inactive. These are collected in Category:CS1 maint: DOI inactive.
This may represent:
- An incorrectly specified DOI. In this case, the DOI in question should be corrected.
- A DOI awaiting entry into the Handle System system. In this case, the DOI will soon be active, and a bot will remove the doi-broken-date parameter next time it checks the transcluding article. The article will be correctly listed in this category but does not require further editing until the DOI becomes active.
- A system error with the DOI resolving agency. This should be reported to the DOI resolver (e.g. Crossref) so that it can be fixed - preferably including a link to the journal article claiming the link as further information.
- Publisher issues. A new publisher may have taken over a journal, or a publisher may not yet support DOIs, despite assigning them. In this case, the DOI may not produce a usable hyperlink but still serves as a permanent identifier for the article in question. It should be marked using the
|doi-broken-date=
parameter of {{cite xxx}}. The article will then be correctly listed in this category until the DOI becomes active. The DOI error report method might not work for these, since the publisher and the DOI owner are not the same. - The DOI has changed, such as the Archives of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine which changed its DOIs when it changed publishers.
- Internal use only DOI. The American Medical Association, for example, assigns a DOI to all of its journal articles, but many of these are only in the META tags on the web pages and Crossref will not resolve these. Since these can be found with an Internet search engine and might eventually resolve they should be left in the citation.
- The DOI resolves to a dead link. These are hard to report, since the doi.org thinks the DOI works and sometimes the journal no longer exists.
Pages in this category should only be added by Module:Citation/CS1.
By default, Citation Style 1 and Citation Style 2 error messages are visible to all readers and maintenance messages are hidden from all readers.
To display maintenance messages in the rendered article, include the following text in your common CSS page (common.css) or your specific skin's CSS page and (skin.css).
(Note to new editors: those CSS pages are specific to you, and control your view of pages, by adding to your user account's CSS code. If you have not yet created such a page, then clicking one of the .css
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.mw-parser-output span.cs1-maint {display: inline;} /* display Citation Style 1 maintenance messages */
To display hidden-by-default error messages:
.mw-parser-output span.cs1-hidden-error {display: inline;} /* display hidden Citation Style 1 error messages */
Even with this CSS installed, older pages in Wikipedia's cache may not have been updated to show these error messages even though the page is listed in one of the tracking categories. A null edit will resolve that issue.
After (error and/maintenance) messages are displayed, it might still not be easy to find them in a large article with a lot of citations. Messages can then be found by searching (with Ctrl-F) for "(help)" or "cs1".
To hide normally-displayed error messages:
.mw-parser-output span.cs1-visible-error {display: none;} /* hide Citation Style 1 error messages */
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Pages in category "CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of September 2024"
The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 2,646 total. This list may not reflect recent changes.
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- Cladonia rei
- Cladrastis clade
- Clavariadelphus truncatus
- Adelaide Claxton
- Cleveland Shale
- Climate change in Algeria
- Climate change in Zimbabwe
- Climate governance
- Clomifene
- Clostridium botulinum
- Cloud computing
- Clown
- CLUAP1
- Club Penguin
- Coconut
- Coffee production in Indonesia
- Cognitive genomics
- Cognitive science
- Avner Cohen
- Coherence (fairness)
- Cola rostrata
- Colasposoma
- Cold urticaria
- Natalie Robinson Cole
- D. Jackson Coleman
- Coleoptera paleobiota of Burmese amber
- Coleus amboinicus
- Collateral damage
- Collective responsibility
- Collón Curá Formation
- Colonial architecture of Brazil
- Racial color blindness
- Colorism in the Caribbean
- Colpodes
- Come Out!
- Command and control structure of the European Union
- Commelinaceae
- List of common misconceptions
- Community food security
- Compulsory sterilization
- Computational neuroscience
- Computational sociology
- Concentration of land ownership
- Conceptacle
- Concrete
- Concyclic points
- Condom
- Congenital adrenal hyperplasia due to 21-hydroxylase deficiency
- Coniothyriaceae
- Conjugate gradient squared method
- Conjugated estrogens
- Jean Conochie
- Conospermum
- Conradi–Hünermann syndrome
- Hermann Conring
- Constantine the Great
- Constitution of Iran
- Constitution of the United States
- Consumer behaviour
- Continuum hypothesis
- Controversies about psychiatry
- Convention for Limiting the Manufacture and Regulating the Distribution of Narcotic Drugs
- Convention People's Party
- Convergent evolution
- List of converts to Christianity from Hinduism
- Convexity in economics
- Conviviality
- Cook Islands
- Lia Cook
- Copiapoa
- Cornus officinalis
- Corticium (fungus)
- Cortisol
- David G. Cory
- Cotztetlana villadai
- Council of Constantinople (1872)
- Courland Governorate
- Court of Cassation (Belgium)
- Jeanette Covacevich
- COVID-19 lab leak theory
- COVID-19 pandemic in Italy
- COVID-19 vaccine misinformation and hesitancy
- Coxsackie A virus
- Crabtree's catalyst
- Joel Cracraft
- Mount Craddock
- Craticula
- Creative destruction
- Creativity
- Crepis
- Laura Crispini
- Cristero War
- Melania Cristescu
- Critical data studies
- Criticism of Wikipedia
- Peter Crittenden
- Crohn's disease
- Cross-strait relations
- Crotalarieae
- Crown group
- Crurithyris
- Cryptogyny
- Cryptorchidism
- CST4
- Cuban cigar
- Cubispa
- Cueros de Purulla
- Cuitlatec language
- Mark Cullen (physician)
- Culture of Domesticity
- Cultural depictions of ravens
- Cunoniaceae
- Cursus publicus
- Cutting (plant)
- John Cutting (psychiatrist)
- Cynanchum
- Cynanchum viminale
- Cyrtodactylus
- Cyrtophora citricola
- Cyrus the Great
D
- Dahlia
- Dahlia imperialis
- Dairy
- Dalbergioids
- Dalhousiea
- Dalton Wells Isolation Center
- Marie Maynard Daly
- Dam removal
- Damascus
- Darlingia ferruginea
- Darter
- Darul Uloom Haqqania
- Darul Uloom Karachi
- Veena Das
- Date rape drug
- David (Michelangelo)
- Alun Huw Davies
- Richard Dawkins bibliography
- DBC1
- Deacetoxycephalosporin-C synthase
- Deferasirox
- Definition of terrorism
- Delafloxacin
- Charles-Eugène Delaunay
- Delayed sleep phase disorder
- Anne Dell
- Delta formation
- Delvinë
- Democracy
- Demographics of Zambia
- Denial of genocides of Indigenous peoples
- Arabella Denny
- Dentistry in ancient Rome
- Deobandi fiqh
- Deobandi movement
- Deobandi movement in Iran
- Deodorant
- Dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans
- Dermorphin
- Designated Member Review
- Jane Desmond
- Dessonornis
- Destruction of the Seven Cities
- Detarioideae
- Dextroamphetamine
- Dharani
- Diabetic retinopathy
- Dialioideae
- Diapensiaceae
- Die Kuranten
- Roberto McCausland Dieppa
- Dieterich's disease
- Diffusing capacity
- Đilasism
- Dilophosaurus
- Dimethylcarbamoyl chloride
- Dinocyst
- Cheikh Anta Diop
- Dioscorea alata
- Dipeptidyl peptidase-4
- Diplolepis rosae
- Dipterygeae
- Dipyanone
- Directed ortho metalation
- Disability in Belize
- Discovery and development of nucleoside and nucleotide reverse-transcriptase inhibitors
- Disembowelment
- Disinformation attack
- Disorders of diminished motivation
- Disporotrichum
- Disposition effect
- Disruptive mood dysregulation disorder
- Division by zero
- Division of Industrial Hygiene
- Diwangkara's long-tailed giant rat
- Robert K. Dixon
- Djadochtatherioidea
- DNAJA3
- DNAJB6
- Dnipro