![]() | This is an
essay. It contains the advice or opinions of one or more Wikipedia contributors. This page is not an encyclopedia article, nor is it one of
Wikipedia's policies or guidelines, as it has not been
thoroughly vetted by the community. Some essays represent widespread norms; others only represent minority viewpoints. |
This is my rating scale for articles, and for me to determine good and featured article candidates.
P |
A P-class article is an article that meets or exceeds the quality of a professional encyclopedia article. A P-class article meets criteria 2-6 of the A-class criteria, plus the article is:
|
A |
An A-class article is a well-written article, and nearly approaches the quality of a professional encyclopedia article. An A-class article is:
|
B |
A B-class article is an article that is mostly complete, however needs some editing in order for it to be professionally-written. A B-class article is:
|
C |
A C-class article is an article that covers the major points of the topic, however needs substantial editing in order for it to be professionally-written. A C-class article is:
|
D |
A D-class article is an article that gives more than a dictionary definition or short summary of the topic, however still needs substantial editing. The only criteria for a D-class article is that the article is:
|
Stub |
A stub-class article includes any stub or any very poorly written article, i.e. an article that is very difficult to understand, unclear and approaching the point of patent nonsense, or an article that contravenes WP:NOT. Any article that only gives a short summary of the topic falls into this category, but very poorly written content will always fit into this category. |
![]() | This is an
essay. It contains the advice or opinions of one or more Wikipedia contributors. This page is not an encyclopedia article, nor is it one of
Wikipedia's policies or guidelines, as it has not been
thoroughly vetted by the community. Some essays represent widespread norms; others only represent minority viewpoints. |
This is my rating scale for articles, and for me to determine good and featured article candidates.
P |
A P-class article is an article that meets or exceeds the quality of a professional encyclopedia article. A P-class article meets criteria 2-6 of the A-class criteria, plus the article is:
|
A |
An A-class article is a well-written article, and nearly approaches the quality of a professional encyclopedia article. An A-class article is:
|
B |
A B-class article is an article that is mostly complete, however needs some editing in order for it to be professionally-written. A B-class article is:
|
C |
A C-class article is an article that covers the major points of the topic, however needs substantial editing in order for it to be professionally-written. A C-class article is:
|
D |
A D-class article is an article that gives more than a dictionary definition or short summary of the topic, however still needs substantial editing. The only criteria for a D-class article is that the article is:
|
Stub |
A stub-class article includes any stub or any very poorly written article, i.e. an article that is very difficult to understand, unclear and approaching the point of patent nonsense, or an article that contravenes WP:NOT. Any article that only gives a short summary of the topic falls into this category, but very poorly written content will always fit into this category. |