 Citation generators, like you find in Google Scholar and Library Search, are a great referencing tool that will save you lots of typing and fiddly editing. Look for the quotation mark icon, but it's important that you always check the references they create as there will likely be errors. Here's an example of a library search citation in APA style for a journal article. Let's paste this into a Word document. We can see already that there are some mistakes. Firstly, the author's names are spelled out. We need to change their first names into initials. Next, we need to check the capitalization in the title. We need a capital for the first word and for the first word in a subtitle. Here we also have capitals for proper names, which is correct. So we don't need to change anything. Citation generators sometimes bring across extra information that we don't need in our APA reference, so make sure you delete this. We also need to add the DOI or URL if it's an electronic resource. Lastly, when we copy and paste from a citation generator, your italics will often disappear. So we need to check and fix up the formatting. Once you have finished all your references, don't forget to put the list in alphabetical order and add the hanging indent. For more examples, check the CDU APA referencing guide.