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Reviewer: ChrisGualtieri (talk · contribs) 18:29, 9 November 2014 (UTC)
I'll take this. ChrisGualtieri (talk) 18:29, 9 November 2014 (UTC)
Quite a few dead links for this article. Ref 21, 27, 30, 40 and 101. Ref 120 is forbidden. Should be fixed. Some of the references like "Cloud Dynamics" link to a Google book page which is completely hidden, so a page reference would be immensely helpful for verification.
The article has numerous typos and possibly vandalism with "homoosphere" as an example. The article provides no concise overview is filled with dozens of obscure words that are too-technical for most non-experts. This is compounded by a complete lack of proper introduction. Terms like "troposphere" should be linked. I remember reading a high school text book with a chapter on clouds that actually provided a two page summary that set up the pieces before plowing into the complexities covered on this page. Since we aim for high school readership or low college, I believe that this is required for a Good Article.
The key issue is that entire paragraphs going unsourced. What is sorta upsetting me is the fact that the cloud types are thrown up on the page without much introduction and sorting and are more complete than their respective pages. Source 49 and 50 is not the source for a lot of this information. So much of the information is unsourced, questionably sourced or just not matching. I do not think this should have been nominated at this time. It requires an almost complete re-write and restructuring to be coherent. A structure similar to Sea would be a great starting point. I've placed the article on hold, but there is so many issues that I feel this could be impossible within even a month of active working. Also the nominator does not seem to be a major contributor to this article. ChrisGualtieri (talk) 18:58, 9 November 2014 (UTC)
I will deal with the dead links on a time-permitting basis. Links die all the time on an article with over 100 references. They are very hard to keep up with.
Why is ref 120 forbidden? What does that even mean?
I will try and deal with links to hidden Google book pages on a time-permitting basis.
Typos identified in the "Bugs" section of "Revision History Statistics" have been fixed. If there are any others, please specify, or better still, fix them yourself.
The article has an intro/overview which may or not be sufficiently concise or proper. Is it too long or too short? What should be put in and what should be taken out?
I have been adding new references with the goal of achieving at least one for each paragraph. This takes time and I'm hampered by the fact I work slowly and I have a life outside Wikipedia.
The term "troposphere" has been linked for a long time. I try to provide links or all technical terms I use. Which terms did I miss? A few examples will suffice.
It looks to me like you're more than "sorta" upset with this article. You're so bugged-out that parts of your paragraph 3 are missing words or are somewhat incoherent. I have no idea what you mean by the cloud types not being "introduced" or that they are supposedly "more complete than their respective pages". However, I'll check out sources 49 and 50 to see what the problem is with them. As for a complete rewrite, good luck with that; nobody at Wikipedia (including myself) has the time or resources to do anything so radical or ambitious. The sections might not be in perfect order, but I believe they follow a logical sequence. If you believe otherwise, please outline what you think the sequence should be based on the order of the titles and subtitles in the article's index. I've checked out the article Sea, but it's a completely different kind of subject that follows its own logic. I couldn't discern much in the article's structure that would be applicable to the cloud article.
That all said, I agree this can't be dealt with in a few days and the article should not yet be nominated for GA. I've been the major contributer to this article since 2010, but I have no illusions I can ever achieve GA quality by myself. I have a good technical knowledge of the subject, but I'm not a skilled writer or editor. Maybe I should never have taken this project on, but if I hadn't, there would only be the short, sketchy, outdated, sometimes inaccurate, and almost completely unreferenced version that existed for most of the decade before 2010. I started off hoping for a team effort with other editors with better writing skills than myself, but I can now see Wikipedia doesn't work that way. There's a very good article on the internet called "The decline of Wikipedia" which points out its dog-eat-dog way of doing business. There is little or no mentoring of newbies like myself by senior editors who seem content to carp and take pot-shots from the sidelines, maybe to try and scare us off. For better or worse, I'm not so easily intimidated by the establishment. ChrisCarss Former24.108.99.31(talk)13:39, 12 November 2014 (UTC)
Thankyou for your very positive, encouraging, and helpful feedback! Actually, the text about polar stratospheric and mesospheric clouds got split up because I got a bit overzealous with your suggestion to put the formation and distribution text after the classification text. I reorganized it so that classification of clouds above the troposphere were in the same broad section as tropospheric classification, so that stratospheric and mesospheric formation appeared lower down the article after tropospheric formation. This might have been justifiable if the sections about the very high clouds were as large and extensive as for tropospheric clouds, but they are very much smaller and therefore not served well by being split up. I now have a compromise arrangement that starts with tropospheric classification followed by tropospheric formation and distribution, then repeating the same pattern for clouds above the troposphere.
Even before you suggested making the article more concise by splitting off some text to other pages, I was thinking at least parts of that big section called "summary of etages, forms, genera, species" etc. could be moved to the "List of cloud types" article (especially the cloud code numbers and symbols) while descriptions of the species, and other subtypes could be me moved to the individual Wikipedia articles for each major cloud type, and the descriptions of the genus-types could be moved further up the article and merged with the section "Etages and cross-classification into genera". I have higher priorities right now like improving and increasing the number of inline citations and doing a few other things you've emphasized, but it's something we can talk about in more detail and make some decisions as this project progresses. One part of the article I've already made more concise is the table of contents. I've reduced the TOC limit and reformatted some of the titles/subtitles.
I'm wondering if maybe we should have any further discussions about this on our user pages rather than the talk page, at least while we're talking more about the finer points of what I'm doing. I guess it depends on how much of what we're saying to each other might be of interest to others and how much of it is only of interest to us. ChrisCarss Former24.108.99.31(talk) 12:00, 18 November 2014 (UTC)
If I'm understanding you correctly, maybe you haven't quite crossed the line that would prevent you from giving the article its final review. Definitely I would prefer to have you as my reviewer because you've taken the most interest in my work and you know the most about what I'm doing and the strengths and weakness's I bring to this epic task. You make a very good point about creating a "see also:" for the subject of mist. For some reason, mist has never been mentioned in the article, and it never occurred to me to mention it either. It has been my approach for quite awhile to create links between key points in the main article and other "pages" or articles by using double brackets in the edit text, the "see also:" which I've used in one place to create a link to the "List of cloud types", and of course the inline citations. The latter is a skill I've taken a long time to figure out, and I'm still very slow at it. I know there are even other ways to create links including "main article:" and at the bottom of the page, "external links:". For me, knowing which type of link to use with each relevent theme or point can be a bit tricky at times. I can see that sorting out the main themes from the side themes is a vital part of that process. I'll make it a high priority to work in a reference to "mist", and maybe "haze" and "smoke" as well, since they can all be involved in the creation of clouds, or can appear as surface-based layers or layers aloft in their own right. ChrisCarss Former24.108.99.31(talk) 00:06, 9 December 2014 (UTC)
My work has continued, with a good part of my efforts over the past 3 weeks being centered on shifting text from this article to other more appropriate linked articles in order to make this article more concise and cloud-centered. I've added a few words about mist as an elaboration of the text about fog with particular reference the visibility criteria for each. So far, I haven't included haze or smoke because neither are hydrometeors. If you think I should include them anyway (both are sometimes observed or encountered as layers aloft), I can do so as long as I include that particular qualification. I think I have an approach to doing citations/references that I'm comfortable with. I'm still rather slow at it because I don't have good keyboard skills (I took keyboard, then known as "typing", as an optional subject in my first year of high school and bombed my second term with a mark of 28%!!). However, I'm slowly but semi-steadily adding new citations as I find new sources using Google. I've had a look at the German language article and it has some interesting graphics. I don't know enough German to be able to evaluate any of the text unless I undertake the rather cumbersome process of running it all through Google translate. If there are some particular parts of the German article you think I should take a close look at, I'll have to ask you to specify which sections you have in mind. I'm taking a few days off for Christmas, then resuming again to try and have this beast in the cage by or before the end of January, the time objective I set for myself soon after we started our dialogue. I wish you all the best for the holiday season and thank you again for your ongoing assistnce! ChrisCarss Former24.108.99.31(talk) 12:45, 23 December 2014 (UTC)
Well here we go again. This time my efforts are being panned by a senior editor who doesn't appear to have much idea what I've really been up to. No activity on this article for the past 20 days?? REALLY???? Perhaps this editor should take a look beyond the discussion page to the actual article and the edit history and see just how much activity there's really been. If this article still isn't quite up to GA standard, that's one thing, but don't falsely cite me for indolence!!
I've been told by one senior editor that the article has come a long way in the past 51 days, but now another tells it has all been for nought so far. I've been told the article need more citations, so I've added more citations. I've been told the article needs sections about the origin of the word 'cloud' and a concise history of cloud science, and I've added both. I've been told the article needs to be more concise so I've made it more concise. I've been told the article needs to be restructured with the sections about classification ahead of the sections about formation, and I've done that. Now I'm being told by another senior editor it still isn't good enough.
So please, somebody, tell me what do you want me do do next. Is the article in its present form still only a C-grade like it was back in 2010 when I did my first edits? The article was very incomplete then and was using an outated classification system abandoned by the WMO back in the 1950's!! I think it must be closer to a B-level by now. If an A-grade is beyond my competence, is there anything I can do to bring it at least to a B level? ChrisCarss Former24.108.99.31(talk) 23:34, 16 January 2015 (UTC)
An elaborate but out-of-date classification table has been moved at least temporarily to this page to see if it can fixed. Details to follow. ChrisCarss Former24.108.99.31(talk) 12:44, 28 January 2015 (UTC)
I have been trying ro raise the cloud article from a C-grade to at least a B-grade for a long time. I think I've addressed issues raised during the unsuccessful GA review earlier this year, but I still need very specific comments about other content and writing style that may be undermining my efforts. I believe the introduction is good according to one senior editor who has commented on this discussion page and says this should now be a B-grade article. Apart from the intro, I think most other sections of the article are in need of a PR, although I think I've taken a balanced and neutral approach to the section on forms, etages, and cross-classification into genera.
I don't seem to be having any success following the instructions to create a new peer review discussion page; I just keep getting sent back to this page. This whole process needs to be made more user friendly. ChrisCarss Former24.108.99.31 (talk) 23:43, 29 July 2015 (UTC)
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