For an overview of the various ways to cite information in text in APA style, see the Purdue OWL, which provides an overview of the basic in text citation formats.
Author's Last Name, Author's First Initial. Author's Middle Initial. (Year, Month/Date/Season). Title of article. Title of Journal/Magazine, (Issue), Page(s). doi:xx.xxxxxxx
(Note: Not every article will have a Digital Object Identifier (DOI) number in the reference citation. The DOI is an alphanumeric string that is assigned to some electronic articles, and if it appears in the citation information for an article you are citing from an electronic source, it should be included. Reference citations without a DOI will look the same as the example citation above, but without "doi:xx.xxxxxxxx". If no DOI is assigned to an article, but you retrieved the article online, be sure to include the URL for the page where you found the article, using the following format: Retrieved from http://www.websiteaddress.com)
7th edition
DOI format is used in the form of a link using the phrase https://doi.org/xx.xxxxxxx
"Retrieved from" is no longer used in the citation. List the URL alone.
Sutherland, M. B. (2000, May). Problems of diversity in policy and practice: Celtic languages in the United Kingdom
7th edition
Sutherland, M. B. (2000, May). Problems of diversity in policy and practice: Celtic languages in the United Kingdom
Education, 36(2),199-209. https://doi.org/10.1080/03050060050045363
Gubbins, H., O'Halloran, S.,
June). A forum for the practice of musicology in
Postgraduate Musicology, 9, 5.
7th edition
List all authors up to 20, with the & used between the last two authors. If 21 authors are listed, list up to 19, ellipsis and no ampersand before the last author.
Gubbins, H., O'Halloran, S.,
in
Elmer-DeWitt, P., & Farley, C. J. (1994, March 21). People who eat Hostess
Twinkies. Time, 143(12), 22.