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Talk:Isosceles triangle/GA1

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Reviewer: Fearstreetsaga (talk · contribs) 19:34, 11 September 2018 (UTC)[reply]

The article was a good read. Here are my suggestions:

Terminology, classification, and examples
  • "isosceles sets, sets of more than three points in which every triangle is isosceles" Based on the definition provided in the reference, an isosceles set could have three points. This also does not make it clear where these triangles come from; consider rewording this to make it more clear that any three points in the set form an isosceles triangle.
Perimeter
  • "In the equilateral case (when the isoperimeteric inequality becomes an equality) there is only one such triangle, which is equilateral." Mentioning equilateral twice here is repetitive. We know the triangle is equilateral because we are considering the equilateral case.
Angle bisector length
Radii
In architecture and design
History and fallacies
  • "Others claim that the name stems" Replace claim per MOS:Words to watch
  • "but W. W. Rouse Ball claims priority in this matter" What do you mean by this?
Notes
  • "Some other sources claim" Same as above
    •  Done. This was the toughest one to handle, because I don't want to list publications in the references section (implicitly saying that they're good references to the subject) only to say somewhere else that they're actually not so good, and I don't think we need to point fingers at authors of discredited theories. But I found a recent and impeccable source (Clagett) who attributes the "some other sources" claim more specifically to "many of the early Egyptologists" so I went with that as a direct quote. —David Eppstein (talk) 06:53, 13 September 2018 (UTC)[reply]
References


@Fearstreetsaga: Ok, I think I've handled all the points you mentioned above. Anything else to do? —David Eppstein (talk) 06:53, 13 September 2018 (UTC)[reply]

@David Eppstein: Everything looks good. I'll go ahead and pass the article. Congratulations. Fearstreetsaga (talk) 13:24, 13 September 2018 (UTC)[reply]