Just for informations' sake I remark that the significance of the presuperscript t in {}^t(\nu_1,\nu_2) is to make the transpose "column" vector out of the row (\nu_1,\nu_2). The superscript t also commonly occurs after a vector or matrix and is often, these days, carefully typeset in sans-serif. Here it's a good example of the prescript notation that TeX doesn't cope with as well as one would like. Patrick >7. <<< > I don't know what it means to place "t" as a prescript in front of > the pair "?nu?;1, ?nu?;2", so i was not able to choose a more > meaningful compound name. The new compound is attained with a > context definition.Received on Monday, 8 July 1996 09:26:41 UTC
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