- From: Neil Soiffer <soiffer@alum.mit.edu>
- Date: Mon, 27 Jun 2022 08:53:41 -0700
- To: "E.A.Moore" <e.a.moore@open.ac.uk>
- Cc: Chemistry CG <public-chem-web-pub@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <CAESRWkAQ+qs7GPTW9dOcZnr86B=jXawpAeocbC3UP5hS5ZFGPg@mail.gmail.com>
Thanks for the quick response (again). Just to be clear, when speaking isotopes/nuclides, MathCAT should speak the chemical name. But when speaking other formulas, it should spell out the abbreviation. Correct? Or should there be options to control that? Neil On Mon, Jun 27, 2022 at 2:30 AM E.A.Moore <e.a.moore@open.ac.uk> wrote: > I would say superscript number element e.g. forty potassium, two three > eight uranium if there is just a superscript and superscript subscript > element if both super and subscripts are present, e.g. two three eight > ninety two uranium. > > > > Elaine > > > > > > > > Sent from Mail <https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=550986> for > Windows > > > > *From: *Neil Soiffer <soiffer@alum.mit.edu> > *Sent: *27 June 2022 01:13 > *To: *Chemistry CG <public-chem-web-pub@w3.org> > *Subject: *how to speak isotopes/nuclides? > > > > CAUTION: This mail comes from outside the University. Please consider this > before opening attachments, clicking links, or acting on the content. > > Another thing to add to the document: how should prescripts on elements > (isotopes) be spoken? I need to know what to say when there is a single > super-prescript and when both a super and sup prescript are present. > > > > Thanks, > > > > Neil > > > > >
Received on Monday, 27 June 2022 15:54:02 UTC