Note: This is only appropriate for journals that JSTOR has assigned a numeric ID to. There are also individual documents at JSTOR which do not fit into the URL pattern implemented in the template.--
SallyForth12300:51, 19 August 2007 (UTC)reply
It is probably possible, but not a good idea. For starters, a significant portion of pre-1920s content is now freely available. Also, the template is not necessarily the last element in the citation, and in many oinstances you'd end up with two {{subscription required}}.
Circéus (
talk)
17:06, 9 December 2011 (UTC)reply
The problem, it turns out, is with {{Cite jstor}}, but I am not sure if fixing the dois wouldn't break the whole citations, since the bot that is supposed to fill them is apparently nonworking since August of last year because of the JSTOR API.
Circéus (
talk)
04:24, 28 September 2013 (UTC)reply
Can we get the bot to give the citation without the doi, or get a bot to copy the citations, instead? I would like to use this template, and was excited to find it in the same instance I saw it was broken, as I hate filling them out, and I want to start citing authorities for type genera. To me, the bot should always been dumping a full citation. That we can edit --(
AfadsBad (
talk)
04:32, 28 September 2013 (UTC))reply
I just tried {{jstor}} and it gives a link but no citation information. Is this filled in later or something? If that is the case then just not using cite jstor would work, but if the jstor template doesn't give the citation information it is less useful than an incorrect doi, imo. Thanks for the all the help. By the way, you write the best DYKs on Wikipedia. --(
AfadsBad (
talk)
16:34, 28 September 2013 (UTC))reply
{{cite jstor}} a b Nee, Michael (1990). "The Domestication of Cucurbita (Cucurbitaceae)". Economic Botany (New York: New York Botanical Gardens Press) 44 (3, Supplement: New Perspectives on the Origin and Evolution of New World Domesticated Plants): 56–68. doi:10.2307.2F4255271. JSTOR 4255271. edit