In one sentence, describe what the following article is about: ” On the menu at the left side of the dashboard, about halfway down, hover over "MailPoet," and then click "Newsletters." At the top of the page, next to the ‘All Newsletters’ heading, click the "Create a new email" button. ” On the page, select the "Automatic newsletter" radio button next to "What type of newsletter is this?" On the "Automatically sent…" line, leave the first dropdown set as "When there’s new content…" which will trigger an email to be sent at a time depending on what you set in the second drop down on that line. Your choices are:  "once a day at…" "weekly on…’ ‘monthly on the…" "monthly every…" "immediately…" The first four choices will bring up another set of drop downs with which you may set the date and time parameters based on the choice. If you select ‘immediately’ there will be no further choices. " Select what you’d like your email’s subject to be. You can also add some placeholder tokens that will automatically populate dynamic data into your subject line. Here are placeholder tokens you may use:  [newsletter:total] displays number of posts. [newsletter:post_title] will display the name of your latest post. [newsletter:number] will show the issue number of your newsletter. You must now select which list you’d like your automatic emails to send to. If it’s general subscribers to your WordPress site, i.e. they haven’t signed up for a specific newsletter, select the list called "WordPress Users." Once you’ve selected the list, click the "Next Step" button at the bottom of the page. On the next page is your email. By default, it has the "Automatic latest content" already added. Hover over it, or any of the pre-populated text boxes, and click the "Edit automatic latest conten" button.  Here, you can select whether posts or pages get sent, the maximum number of posts or pages per email, and you can also select which post categories get sent. For any of the other pre-populated text boxes in the email, click the "Edit Display" button that appears. To remove them, click the "X" that appears at the upper right when you hover over it. To the right of the email is a box with four tabs: the Content, Images, Styles, and Themes.  On the "Content" tab are four widgets you may click and drag into the email to the left. They are:  Titles & Text Automatic latest content Divider Social Bookmarks   On the "Images" tab, you may click the "Add Images" button and upload pictures, or select them from your media library. "Styles" is where you set the colors, fonts, and other style parameters. ‘Themes’ is where you can select an overall style template for your newsletters. When you’re happy with the appearance of your email, scroll to the bottom of the page and click the "Next Step" button. On the "Final step: last details" page, you will have the opportunity to review everything you did on the "First step: main details" page. On the "Sender" line, enter the name and email address from which this email is being sent.  Below the "Reply-to name & email" line, enter your email address in the text box, and click the "Send preview" button. Check your email, and make sure your email looks like you expect it should. Click "Activate Now" and you have an automatic email that sends a message when your WordPress site is updated.
Summary: Log in to your WordPress dashboard. Go to “Newsletters. Click on “Create a New Email” button. Select “Automatic Newsletter. Set the date and time parameters. Set your "Subject Line. Organize your subscriber list. Manage your newsletter. Edit the appearance. Click “Next Step” button. Review. Edit Sender. Enter the name and email address to which subscribers will be sending if they reply (on the ‘Reply-to name & email’ line). Preview. Activate.

Problem: Article: When citing in MLA format, your in-text citation should include the author’s name and the page number that the information is from. You can include these together in a parenthetical citation, or you can mention one in your writing and the other in a parenthetical citation.  Ex: We can therefore ascertain that “Rembrandt’s decline in popularity may have been his dedication to Biblical painting” (Wallace 112). Ex: According to some, “another reason for Rembrandt’s decline in popularity may have been his dedication to Biblical painting” (Wallace 112), but not everyone agree on this matter. Ex: Wallace states that “another reason for Rembrandt’s decline in popularity may have been his dedication to Biblical painting” (112). Slightly different than MLA format, APA requires an in-text parenthetical citation with the author’s last name and the year the text was published. They must be included together in the parentheses, or you can mention the name of the author in your writing and put just the year in parentheses afterwards.  Ex: As Billy’s character is described, we learn “Billy wasn’t a Catholic, even though he grew up with a ghastly crucifix on his wall” (Vonnegut 1969). Ex: Vonnegut gives a factual statement with a clear opinion thrown in when he says “Billy wasn’t a Catholic, even though he grew up with a ghastly crucifix on his wall” (1969). Ex: With the knowledge that “Billy wasn’t a Catholic, even though he grew up with a ghastly crucifix on his wall” (Vonnegut 1969), we begin to understand his philosophical standings. The Chicago style of formatting research essays uses footnotes at the bottom of your page rather than in-text parenthetical citations. In order to cite a quotation in your paper, add a footnote number immediately after the ending quotation mark (not inside the quotes). This should be paired with a matching citation at the bottom of the page.
Summary:
Quote in MLA format. Quote in APA format. Quote in Chicago style.