🕷️ Crawler Inspector

URL Lookup

Direct Parameter Lookup

Raw Queries and Responses

1. Shard Calculation

Query:
Response:
Calculated Shard: 23 (from laksa031)

2. Crawled Status Check

Query:
Response:

3. Robots.txt Check

Query:
Response:

4. Spam/Ban Check

Query:
Response:

5. Seen Status Check

ℹ️ Skipped - page is already crawled

đź“„
INDEXABLE
âś…
CRAWLED
7 days ago
🤖
ROBOTS ALLOWED

Page Info Filters

FilterStatusConditionDetails
HTTP statusPASSdownload_http_code = 200HTTP 200
Age cutoffPASSdownload_stamp > now() - 6 MONTH0.3 months ago
History dropPASSisNull(history_drop_reason)No drop reason
Spam/banPASSfh_dont_index != 1 AND ml_spam_score = 0ml_spam_score=0
CanonicalPASSmeta_canonical IS NULL OR = '' OR = src_unparsedNot set

Page Details

PropertyValue
URLhttps://novaonline.nvcc.edu/eli/lbr105/unit3/citingweb.htm
Last Crawled2026-04-07 06:13:16 (7 days ago)
First Indexednot set
HTTP Status Code200
Meta TitleCiting Web Sites and Web Pages
Meta Descriptionnull
Meta Canonicalnull
Boilerpipe Text
Citing Websites and Web Pages The pieces of information you need to cite information from the web include: Sometimes a web page or website will not actually provide all of this information.  For example, sometimes an author is not named, or copyright or update information might not be provided.  In those cases, just create a citation with as much information as you have.  Here are a few examples: MLA web page Davis, Jeanie Lerche. “Children and Sweetened Drinks: What's a Parent to Do?” WebMD .  2007. Web.  6 July 2009. "About Malaria." Johns Hopkins Malaria Research Institute . Johns Hopkins University, 2005. Web. 8 July 2009. APA web page Davis, J.L. (2007). Children and sweetened drinks: What's a parent to do? Retrieved July 6, 2009, from                 http ://children.webmd.com/features/children-and-sweetened-drinks-whats-a-parent-to-do About malaria . (2009). Retrieved July 8, 2009, from Johns Hopkins University, Johns Hopkins Malaria Research Institute Web site:         http://malaria.jhsph.edu/about_malaria (Notice in the first example for an APA web page that the name of the website, WebMD, is not given.  In APA style the name of the sponsoring website is typically only given if the site is large and complex, such as a university web site or a government website, as in the second example.) Exercise: MLA Citation Scramble [requires Internet Explorer 5.5 or higher] APA Citation Scramble [requires Internet Explorer 5.5 or higher] Where to Learn More For more details about how to create citations for information from the web, consult either of the following: 1.       A style manual -           For MLA:  MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers (call number LB2369 .G53 2009); in the INDEX, look up “Web Publications,” then look for the “in works cited” section. -           For APA:  Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association (call number BF76.7 .P83 2001); in the TABLE OF CONTENTS, check the “Reference List” chapter for Electronic Media.
Markdown
**Citing Websites and Web Pages** The pieces of information you need to cite information from the web include: - author(s) - name of the web page - copyright date or last update date for the site or page - the date you looked at the web page - url (NOT underlined) or name of website, depending on the style. Sometimes a web page or website will not actually provide all of this information. For example, sometimes an author is not named, or copyright or update information might not be provided. In those cases, just create a citation with as much information as you have. Here are a few examples: **MLA web page** Davis, Jeanie Lerche. “Children and Sweetened Drinks: What's a Parent to Do?” *WebMD*. 2007. Web. 6 July 2009. "About Malaria." *Johns Hopkins Malaria Research Institute*. Johns Hopkins University, 2005. Web. 8 July 2009. **APA web page** Davis, J.L. (2007). *Children and sweetened drinks: What's a parent to do?* Retrieved July 6, 2009, from http://children.webmd.com/features/children-and-sweetened-drinks-whats-a-parent-to-do *About malaria*. (2009). Retrieved July 8, 2009, from Johns Hopkins University, Johns Hopkins Malaria Research Institute Web site: http://malaria.jhsph.edu/about\_malaria (Notice in the first example for an APA web page that the name of the website, WebMD, is not given. In APA style the name of the sponsoring website is typically only given if the site is large and complex, such as a university web site or a government website, as in the second example.) **Exercise:** [MLA Citation Scramble](https://novaonline.nvcc.edu/eli/lbr105/unit3/mlaweb.htm)\[requires Internet Explorer 5.5 or higher\] [APA Citation Scramble](https://novaonline.nvcc.edu/eli/lbr105/unit3/apaweb.htm)\[requires Internet Explorer 5.5 or higher\] **Where to Learn More** For more details about how to create citations for information from the web, consult either of the following: 1\. A style manual > \- For MLA: *MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers* (call number LB2369 .G53 2009); in the INDEX, look up “Web Publications,” then look for the “in works cited” section. > > \- For APA: *Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association* (call number BF76.7 .P83 2001); in the TABLE OF CONTENTS, check the “Reference List” chapter for Electronic Media. 2\. Online citation sites: <http://www.nvcc.edu/library/bow_citingref.htm>
Readable Markdown
**Citing Websites and Web Pages** The pieces of information you need to cite information from the web include: Sometimes a web page or website will not actually provide all of this information. For example, sometimes an author is not named, or copyright or update information might not be provided. In those cases, just create a citation with as much information as you have. Here are a few examples: **MLA web page** Davis, Jeanie Lerche. “Children and Sweetened Drinks: What's a Parent to Do?” *WebMD*. 2007. Web. 6 July 2009. "About Malaria." *Johns Hopkins Malaria Research Institute*. Johns Hopkins University, 2005. Web. 8 July 2009. **APA web page** Davis, J.L. (2007). *Children and sweetened drinks: What's a parent to do?* Retrieved July 6, 2009, from http ://children.webmd.com/features/children-and-sweetened-drinks-whats-a-parent-to-do *About malaria*. (2009). Retrieved July 8, 2009, from Johns Hopkins University, Johns Hopkins Malaria Research Institute Web site: http://malaria.jhsph.edu/about\_malaria (Notice in the first example for an APA web page that the name of the website, WebMD, is not given. In APA style the name of the sponsoring website is typically only given if the site is large and complex, such as a university web site or a government website, as in the second example.) **Exercise:** [MLA Citation Scramble](https://novaonline.nvcc.edu/eli/lbr105/unit3/mlaweb.htm) \[requires Internet Explorer 5.5 or higher\] [APA Citation Scramble](https://novaonline.nvcc.edu/eli/lbr105/unit3/apaweb.htm) \[requires Internet Explorer 5.5 or higher\] **Where to Learn More** For more details about how to create citations for information from the web, consult either of the following: 1\. A style manual \- For MLA: *MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers* (call number LB2369 .G53 2009); in the INDEX, look up “Web Publications,” then look for the “in works cited” section. \- For APA: *Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association* (call number BF76.7 .P83 2001); in the TABLE OF CONTENTS, check the “Reference List” chapter for Electronic Media.
Shard23 (laksa)
Root Hash16343853444657508023
Unparsed URLedu,nvcc!novaonline,/eli/lbr105/unit3/citingweb.htm s443