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      • Also, articles can receive a status of "featured articles" (look for a star on the top right side), which indicates that they have met certain Wikipedia standards of excellence.
      skylinecollege.edu › library › informationliteracy
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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › StarStar - Wikipedia

    A star is a luminous spheroid of plasma held together by self-gravity. [citation needed] . The nearest star to Earth is the Sun. Many other stars are visible to the naked eye at night; their immense distances from Earth make them appear as fixed points of light.

    • Star (Disambiguation)

      Star (person) or celebrity Movie star, a person famous for...

    • Stars in Astrology

      This diagram of the Ptolemaic solar system from Peter...

    • Mira

      Mira (/ ˈ m aɪ r ə /), designation Omicron Ceti (ο Ceti,...

    • How Reliable Is Wikipedia?
    • How Can You Determine The Accuracy of A Wikipedia article?
    • Can You Cite Wikipedia?
    • The Obligation Is Yours

    Wikipedia itself addresses this very question in a number of pages and articles on the site. For example, the academic use page states very plainly: "Wikipedia is not considered a credible source." An article about the reliability of Wikipedia also contains a number of quotes from librarians, professors, and researchers saying that Wikipedia is not...

    So Wikipedia is pretty accurate . . . but how can you determine if a specific article or a fact within an article is accurate? Knowing the answer to this question will be valuable for students, many of who use Wikipedia as their first stop when researching a topic, and skeptics of the website. There are a lot of ways you can check the veracity of i...

    A common question from a lot of students is whether you can cite Wikipedia for an academic paper. The short answer is yes, you can . . . but you probably shouldn't. Instead, try to find the original source from where the Wikipedia contributor got their information by looking for in-article citations. If you can find a source, it's a good idea to ci...

    No matter how seriously you choose to take what you read on Wikipedia, it will always be your responsibility to verify what you read if you're going to use it for more than personal conversation with your friends and family. You should put some time into verifying the information on Wikipedia when you're writing a school paper, blog post, online ar...

  3. Sep 26, 2019 · A gold star next to a language link means that this is a featured article — and the editors are indicating that this article is of exceptionally high quality and often used as an example for other Wikipedia authors. It’s always worth checking out articles in other languages that have a star.

  4. Mar 20, 2019 · A star is born. The life cycle of a star spans billions of years. As a general rule, the more massive the star, the shorter its life span. Birth takes place inside hydrogen-based dust clouds ...

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › AsteriskAsterisk - Wikipedia

    The asterisk (/ ˈ æ s t ər ɪ s k / *), from Late Latin asteriscus, from Ancient Greek ἀστερίσκος, asteriskos, "little star", is a typographical symbol. It is so called because it resembles a conventional image of a heraldic star .

    • .mw-parser-output .monospaced{font-family:monospace,monospace}U+002A * ASTERISK (*, *)
  6. To be precise, it means there is insufficient evidence to assume that it could exist or could once have existed in natural language.

  7. A* (pronounced "A-star") is a graph traversal and pathfinding algorithm, which is used in many fields of computer science due to its completeness, optimality, and optimal efficiency. [1] . Given a weighted graph, a source node and a goal node, the algorithm finds the shortest path (with respect to the given weights) from source to goal.

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