User:Gryllida/doc/draft-writing

This is a essay by Gryllida how she thinks it is easier to write a new draft, as a part of the Articles for Creation process. This is not an official document. This procedure has not been endorsed by Wikipedia administrators or reviewers.

Stage 1 - notability assessment (one to two weeks)
How it looks like: Note: this is a draft, it is underground sources review to meet notability.
 * One to two paragraphs.
 * Includes inline citations.
 * Next to each citation there is a [comment] with a remark about whether it is an Independent, Reliable source with Significant Coverage.
 * Article is gradually edited, adding one source at a time.
 * Minor formatting notes:
 * A 'find source' box is present at the end of article, above the references heading.
 * An ambox at the top of the draft notes nick of author and 'stage 1' note.

Foobar is an online platform for image editing. John Smith created it in 2009, and in 2021 it was the most popular website, according to analysis by ABC[1][note: indepenent source, a passing mention, award]. PCMag nominated Foobar for most user engagement award in 2015[2][note: independent source, passing mention, award].

In 2019 an expert review by ZNet indicated Foobar is remarked by use of artificial intelligence for image processing at an advanced level, "comparable with Adobe Photoshop", and cited issues with the website performance[3][note: independent source, analysis].

Stage 2 - writing the first 3-4 paragraphs (one week)
After the sources review has been approved by another contributor, the next step is to expand the article to include more detail, continuing to use high quality sources. Note: this is a draft, it is underground sources review to meet notability.

Foobar is an online platform for image editing. John Smith created it in 2009, and in 2021 it was the most popular website, according to analysis by ABC[1][note: indepenent source, a passing mention, award]. PCMag nominated Foobar for most user engagement award in 2015[2][note: independent source, passing mention, award].

In 2019 an expert review by ZNet indicated Foobar is remarked by use of artificial intelligence for image processing at an advanced level, "comparable with Adobe Photoshop", and cited issues with the website performance[3][note: independent source, analysis].

Foobar is developed by a team of two people, Rob Smithson and Jane Woolish. It is programmed in Ruby, with the source code published at Sourcehut [4][note: dependent source, published code] [5] [independent source - entry at free software directory]. Foobar utilises tensorflow for its image processing.