Template:Did you know nominations/Chemical graph generator

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The following is an archived discussion of the DYK nomination of the article below. Please do not modify this page. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as this nomination's talk page, the article's talk page or Wikipedia talk:Did you know), unless there is consensus to re-open the discussion at this page. No further edits should be made to this page.

The result was: promoted by Amakuru (talk) 23:10, 16 March 2021 (UTC)

Chemical graph generator

Chemical graph of the overlapping substructures of caffeine
Chemical graph of the overlapping substructures of caffeine

Created by Daniel Mietchen (talk). Self-nominated at 07:32, 29 January 2021 (UTC).

  • @Evrik: Sure. This page (on an external wiki) was used as a drafting environment for the Wikipedia article Chemical graph generator. That wiki is operated by PLOS in order to facilitate the creation of PLOS Topic Pages, i.e. articles co-published between them and Wikipedia.[1] The main reason for drafting the articles over there is that the copyright licenses in use at PLOS (CC BY) and Wikipedia (CC BY-SA) are compatible in only one direction, so articles drafted here would not fit in there, but the opposite works. -- Daniel Mietchen (talk) 03:40, 8 February 2021 (UTC)

References

  1. ^ Shoshana J Wodak; Daniel Mietchen; Andrew M Collings; Robert B Russell; Philip E Bourne (2012). "Topic pages: PLoS Computational Biology meets Wikipedia". PLOS Computational Biology. 8 (3): e1002446. doi:10.1371/JOURNAL.PCBI.1002446. ISSN 1553-734X. PMC 3315447. PMID 22479174. Wikidata Q21092570.
  • New enough, long enough, hook interesting and cited. Passes earwig. QPQ Pending. --evrik (talk) 05:52, 9 February 2021 (UTC)
  • Donating QPQ

@Daniel Mietchen, Evrik, and Edge3: sorry for the late notice on this one, but when I was checked it in the queue it seems like there are large numbers of unreferenced statements in the article. I haven't tagged the statements individually with {{cn}} tags, as almost every paragraph in the body seems to have them. Just as one example:

"Jean-Loup Faulon's structure generator relies on equivalence classes over atoms. Atoms with the same interaction type and element are grouped in the same equivalence class. Rather than extending all atoms in a molecule, one atom from each class is connected with other atoms. Similar to the former generator, Julio Peironcely's structure generator, OMG, takes atoms and substructures as inputs and extends the structures using a breadth-first search method. This tree extension terminates when all the branches reach saturated structures.".

All of that needs citing. Please can you go through and add cites so that this can be re-promoted? Cheers  — Amakuru (talk) 10:17, 26 February 2021 (UTC)

@Evrik and Amakuru: I think I have a solution. Let me explain as this is about odd.
This wiki article is almost entirely a copy of the free and open PLOS article
The process for moving such content to Wikipedia is documented at Wikipedia:Journal to wiki publication.
The general idea is that when experts want to present an encyclopedic topic and want it to be free and open, they can write it themselves off wiki, put it through peer review, and have it published. In that workflow anyone can copy it to Wikipedia. It happens that PLOS uses MediaWiki just like Wikipedia, so even the code can be copied over and not just the text.
The original code is in PLOS's wiki at http://topicpageswiki.plos.org/wiki/Chemical_graph_generators, which is useful for wiki but for actual citations the peer reviewed publication is the source.
So to fix the Wikipedia version, I will cite that PLOS published peer reviewed article for every sentence without a citation, because that is all expert peer reviewed content. The original publication does not have citations because these are expert claims, typically of content too obvious for an expert to provide a source. Seem cool? I presume that would pass this.
By the way, I collaborate with Daniel. We organize collaborations between academic journals and Wikipedia. Blue Rasberry (talk) 00:12, 10 March 2021 (UTC)
@Evrik and Amakuru: I cited the original publication throughout the article. Lack of citations is no longer an issue here. Do you see other barriers to advancing the DYK process? Again, I recognize that this is not Wikipedia's typical publishing model so please ask if we should explain more. Blue Rasberry (talk) 21:14, 10 March 2021 (UTC)
  • I'm okay with this. --evrik (talk) 05:32, 12 March 2021 (UTC)
    @Evrik and Bluerasberry: sorry for the delay coming back to this, this is a situation I've not encountered before actually but all seems fine as noted. Evrik please could you restore a tick to this and I can re-promote it. Cheers  — Amakuru (talk) 20:51, 16 March 2021 (UTC)
  • --evrik (talk) 21:12, 16 March 2021 (UTC)