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The article was kept by Nikkimaria via FACBot (talk) 9:33, 25 January 2025 (UTC) [1].
I am nominating this featured article for review because there are uncited passages in the article, including entire sections. There are also lots of sources listed in "Further reading", indicating that the article is not a complete comprehensive overview of all scholarly material, or that random potential sources have been added that are not necessary for the article. This should be evaluated. Z1720 (talk) 14:46, 24 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
replacing older sources just because there are newer ones. It makes sense to replace older sources if and when new discoveries have made them obsolete, or if they are so old that they have become inaccessible, but novelty for novelty's sake isn't really a good way to cover science. Sometimes the best book is an old book that has stood the test of time. XOR'easter (talk) 20:58, 24 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
All content that could reasonably be challenged, except for plot summaries and that which summarizes cited content elsewhere in the article, must be cited no later than the end of the paragraph (or line if the content is not in prose). That
no later thanleaves room for it to be earlier. I don't like GA requirements being "de facto" FA requirements; to my way of thinking, the FA criteria should be the FA criteria, and each additional page that has to be read in order to understand those criteria is a problem, all the more so when the "requirements" are based on an informal notion of precedence that the FA criteria don't even mention! So, what I'm seeing here is an interpretation I don't understand of a rule whose applicability seems ad hoc. Going line by line, I'd probably agree that the current text is a little under-cited, but this whole approach sounds like the same prioritization of busywork that made me give up on GA reviews. 90% of the energy goes into marginal improvements, and the status of the article lives or dies based on changes that range from slight convenience benefits to cosmetic alterations. XOR'easter (talk) 20:56, 25 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The citation should be added close to the material it supports, offering text–source integrity.WP:CITEDENSE gives an example and then says,
Everything in that paragraph deals with the same, single subject from the same source and can therefore be supported by a single inline citation. The inline citation could be placed at any sensible location, but the end of the paragraph is the most common choice(emphasis added). It seems like a common practice that is generally a reasonable idea is being elevated to an ironclad rule. XOR'easter (talk) 22:51, 25 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
any sensible locationis good. It would also be inconsistent with what Wikipedia:Citing sources says a little further down the page:
The distance between material and its source is a matter of editorial judgment. And it may be inconsistent with WP:CITEBUNDLE, which allows for moving a footnote further from the material it supports and spelling out which source supports which claim. So, if the strict rule that a citation only verifies the text that immediately precedes it is correct, Wikipedia's documentation is inconsistent about this and needs to be fixed. But I can't for the life of me imagine that the strict rule is one to which we need to adhere in all circumstances. Anyone reading deep down into an article about astrophysics will be capable of looking a few words backwards to find a blue clicky linky number. Suppose that a paragraph is structured like so: "There are three ways that a foobar can be initialized. First, ... Second, ... Third, ..." Does it make a substantial difference if the blue clicky linky number follows the first sentence or comes at the end of the paragraph? Frankly, that comes down to a matter of taste. In a mathematics article, a section or a subsection might start something like, "A non-Riemannian hypersquare can be defined using the axioms given by Smith." If a footnote to Smith's book follows immediately after that line instead of waiting until the end of the paragraph, there's no actual loss of verifiability. The placement is only cosmetic. And the notion that moving it to the end would prevent the text from going out of sync with the source in later edits is wishful thinking. It's been all of two days since I've seen a counterexample to that, and I haven't been watching many pages at all. XOR'easter (talk) 05:49, 27 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
each support a different portion of the preceding text, we can bundle them together and not have them
immediately follow the text. So, if we read WP:PAIC in the way that you do, then it conflicts with WP:CITEBUNDLE, which is part of Wikipedia:Citing sources, a guideline. That reading of WP:PAIC also conflicts with the statement in the Wikipedia:Citing sources guideline that
The distance between material and its source is a matter of editorial judgment. The only way WP:PAIC can be consistent with the actual guideline is if it pertains only to punctuation and spacing. I mean, I'm fine with putting the footnotes after the text they support. It's seldom a bad idea, and if one absorbs Wikipedian house style by reading Wikipedia articles, it's the practice that one will follow. No problem there. I just think that elevating reasonable rules of thumb to rigid standards is poor form, and questions like "Is this article an example of the best our community has to offer?" shouldn't be answered on such grounds. XOR'easter (talk) 02:49, 28 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Keep Citation concerns have been resolved. "Further reading" has been sorted, and I have no other concerns. Z1720 (talk) 23:49, 21 January 2025 (UTC)[reply]