The date the site was accessed
Author's last name, first name. "Title of Document." Title of Web site. Document date or date of last revision. Date accessed. The URL.
Author's last name first name. "Title of Document." Title of Web site. Document date or date of last revision. Date accessed.
The minimum information you will need will be: the site title, publication date, date you accessed the information, and the URL. you will need: authors/editors name, and organization associated with the site.
A database of this size is continually updated, multiple times a day. In your citation, where you should put the date, use the word Present. Then put Accessed colon and the date you visited the site. This method is also for any site that does not give a specific date for updated.
double date
That is easy to answer-- the site updates every day. In a citation, put the date you accessed it. That is typically listed last as Date Accessed.
It was accessed every day for many years.
There are several variations but you should include (as recommended by Harvard): - author (the person or organisation responsible for the site) - year (date created or last updated) - name of sponsor of site - place of sponsor of site (if available) - accessed day month year (the date you viewed the site) - URL or Internet address (between pointed brackets) - If possible, ensure that the URL is included without a line-break. for example: International Narcotics Control Board 1999, United Nations, Vienna, accessed 1 October 1999, .
There are many, many authors on this site. It is a wiki, which means that anyone can ask and anyone can answer the questions. If you are trying to reference the site in your paper, use Answers as the author, and you use the date that you accessed the page for a website in most citation styles, but you can also check the question history for the specific date when the answer was written.
A web site
For a website, include the URL and the date you accessed the information. These details are not necessary for a book citation.