Meyrowitz, Norman; Dam, Andries (September 1982). «Interactive Editing Systems: Part II». ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR). 14 (3): 353–415 (366–367). doi:10.1145/356887.356890. «EMACS is an M.I.T. display editor designed to be 'extensible, customizable, and self-documenting' [...] Another interesting facility for program editing is the TAGS package. The separate program TAGS builds a TAGS table containing the file name and position in that file in which each application program function is defined. This table is loaded into EMACS; specifying the command Meta, function name causes EMACS to select the appropriate file and go to the proper function definition within that file.»
Raman, T. V. (1997). Auditory user interfaces: toward the speaking computer. Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers. s. 107. ISBN0792399846. OCLC37109286. doi:10.1007/978-1-4615-6225-2. «Calling a function defined in one compilation unit from within another is analogous to cross references in large hypertext documents. By using tags tables, the Emacs environment enables the user to turn program source code into powerful hypertext documents.»
Wempen, Faithe (2010). Teach yourself visually Microsoft Access 2010. Teach yourself visually. Indianapolis: John Wiley & Sons. s. 69. ISBN9780470577653. OCLC495271168. «You can turn on smart tags for a field to make it easier to cross-reference data between the Access database and Microsoft Outlook (or another personal information and e-mail program) and the Web.»
Carcillo, Franco; Rosati, Luca (2007). «Tags for citizens: integrating top-down and bottom-up classification in the Turin municipality website». Online communities and social computing: second international conference, OCSC 2007, held as part of HCI International 2007, Beijing, China, July 22–27, 2007: proceedings. 4564. Berlin; New York: Springer-Verlag. ISBN9783540732563. OCLC184906067. doi:10.1007/978-3-540-73257-0_29.
Gerolimos, Michalis (januar 2013). «Tagging for libraries: a review of the effectiveness of tagging systems for library catalogs». Journal of Library Metadata. 13 (1): 36–58. doi:10.1080/19386389.2013.778730.
Raman, T. V. (1997). Auditory user interfaces: toward the speaking computer. Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers. s. 107. ISBN0792399846. OCLC37109286. doi:10.1007/978-1-4615-6225-2. «Calling a function defined in one compilation unit from within another is analogous to cross references in large hypertext documents. By using tags tables, the Emacs environment enables the user to turn program source code into powerful hypertext documents.»
Meyrowitz, Norman; Dam, Andries (September 1982). «Interactive Editing Systems: Part II». ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR). 14 (3): 353–415 (366–367). doi:10.1145/356887.356890. «EMACS is an M.I.T. display editor designed to be 'extensible, customizable, and self-documenting' [...] Another interesting facility for program editing is the TAGS package. The separate program TAGS builds a TAGS table containing the file name and position in that file in which each application program function is defined. This table is loaded into EMACS; specifying the command Meta, function name causes EMACS to select the appropriate file and go to the proper function definition within that file.»
Carcillo, Franco; Rosati, Luca (2007). «Tags for citizens: integrating top-down and bottom-up classification in the Turin municipality website». Online communities and social computing: second international conference, OCSC 2007, held as part of HCI International 2007, Beijing, China, July 22–27, 2007: proceedings. 4564. Berlin; New York: Springer-Verlag. ISBN9783540732563. OCLC184906067. doi:10.1007/978-3-540-73257-0_29.
Raman, T. V. (1997). Auditory user interfaces: toward the speaking computer. Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers. s. 107. ISBN0792399846. OCLC37109286. doi:10.1007/978-1-4615-6225-2. «Calling a function defined in one compilation unit from within another is analogous to cross references in large hypertext documents. By using tags tables, the Emacs environment enables the user to turn program source code into powerful hypertext documents.»
Wempen, Faithe (2010). Teach yourself visually Microsoft Access 2010. Teach yourself visually. Indianapolis: John Wiley & Sons. s. 69. ISBN9780470577653. OCLC495271168. «You can turn on smart tags for a field to make it easier to cross-reference data between the Access database and Microsoft Outlook (or another personal information and e-mail program) and the Web.»