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I reverted this to the last stable version--the revisions which added content contradicted the version that had existed on several pints, as well as adding POV to the article. Additionally, there were no sources added to support the changes. All very dodgy, in my opinion. 87.210.41.124 15:07, 9 May 2007 (UTC)
The article is much better now. I have removed one sentence and two words from another to make a paragraph NPOV. For the rest, you improved the article. 87.210.41.124 12:30, 13 May 2007 (UTC)
Source? I feel like I'm being trolled...hard. Viriditas ( talk) 12:57, 9 April 2013 (UTC)
I don't recall the path of following one article, to another, to another, that led me to Opera window, but on finding that article, and reading the description thereof, it clicked in my mind that my new car, a 2016 Dodge Dart had a feature very much like that. After few cycles of going outside and examining the window in question on my car, and going back in and reading the article, I concluded that what my car has is indeed an opera window, consistent with what this article describes. I updated the article to include the 2013-2016 Dodge Dart among the vehicles listed as having this feature, and added pictures of the window in question on my car.
Some time after that, it seems, CZmarlin removed my images, with the explanation, “This type of modern car window design is not typically described as an ‘opera window””.
I have to ask, why not?
It seems that any rational, consistent, objective definition that includes all the other examples shown in the article, would also include this. It's a relatively-small window, located in the C-Pillar of a sedan, which appears to be the definition of an opera window, as described in the article. It also serves the purposes which the article describes opera windows as having, of mitigating the blind spots created by the wide C-Pillars, and of providing extra window area to help rear-seat passengers feel less claustrophobic.
I do not see how being on a modern car, in a modern style, makes it not an opera window. I see no objective distinction between this, and the other examples given in the article, of opera windows; to support excluding it from that definition.
— Bob Blaylock ( talk) —Preceding undated comment added 22:01, 26 February 2017 (UTC)
This article is rated B-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
This article links to one or more target anchors that no longer exist.
Please help fix the broken anchors. You can remove this template after fixing the problems. |
Reporting errors |
I reverted this to the last stable version--the revisions which added content contradicted the version that had existed on several pints, as well as adding POV to the article. Additionally, there were no sources added to support the changes. All very dodgy, in my opinion. 87.210.41.124 15:07, 9 May 2007 (UTC)
The article is much better now. I have removed one sentence and two words from another to make a paragraph NPOV. For the rest, you improved the article. 87.210.41.124 12:30, 13 May 2007 (UTC)
Source? I feel like I'm being trolled...hard. Viriditas ( talk) 12:57, 9 April 2013 (UTC)
I don't recall the path of following one article, to another, to another, that led me to Opera window, but on finding that article, and reading the description thereof, it clicked in my mind that my new car, a 2016 Dodge Dart had a feature very much like that. After few cycles of going outside and examining the window in question on my car, and going back in and reading the article, I concluded that what my car has is indeed an opera window, consistent with what this article describes. I updated the article to include the 2013-2016 Dodge Dart among the vehicles listed as having this feature, and added pictures of the window in question on my car.
Some time after that, it seems, CZmarlin removed my images, with the explanation, “This type of modern car window design is not typically described as an ‘opera window””.
I have to ask, why not?
It seems that any rational, consistent, objective definition that includes all the other examples shown in the article, would also include this. It's a relatively-small window, located in the C-Pillar of a sedan, which appears to be the definition of an opera window, as described in the article. It also serves the purposes which the article describes opera windows as having, of mitigating the blind spots created by the wide C-Pillars, and of providing extra window area to help rear-seat passengers feel less claustrophobic.
I do not see how being on a modern car, in a modern style, makes it not an opera window. I see no objective distinction between this, and the other examples given in the article, of opera windows; to support excluding it from that definition.
— Bob Blaylock ( talk) —Preceding undated comment added 22:01, 26 February 2017 (UTC)