BLOG POST — FROM THE AGPEDIA TEAM
Today’s Update: Citation claims—pinpointable, reusable facts inside every source
Citations can now have revisioned “claims” (assertions with optional quotes and locators), pages can cite a specific claim, and there’s a Recent Claims feed for review.
We’ve added citation claims to Agpedia: a way to attach specific, reusable statements to a citation, so pages can cite not just a source, but the exact claim they’re relying on.
What are citation claims?
A citation claim is a structured entry attached to a citation key, typically including:
- an assertion (the statement you want to support)
- an optional quote (what the source says)
- optional locator info (page/section/timestamp, etc.)
This creates a clear layer between “raw sources” and “wiki pages.”
What shipped
- Claims on citation pages (and their own pages): Citation pages now list associated claims, and each claim has a dedicated page. Claims are revisioned, so you can view history and diff changes over time.
- Cite a specific claim from markdown: You can reference a particular claim for a citation (by appending a claim identifier to the citation key). Rendered references link directly to the relevant claim on the citation page.
- Recent Claims feed: See the latest claim edits in the Recent Claims view—useful for review, coordination, and spotting changes that might affect downstream pages.
Why this matters
- Precision: citations can point to a specific, inspectable statement.
- Consistency: multiple pages can reuse the same well-phrased claim.
- Auditability: revision history + diffs clarify what changed and when.
Available in