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Le 22/08/2024 à 08:51, Thomas Heger a écrit :Sure, but fortunately I have not written anything like this.Am Mittwoch000021, 21.08.2024 um 09:31 schrieb Python:Part I.1 is in no way supposed to refer to definitions stated in
>>>Addendum : "the distance from A to B is x": this is wrong too.>
x is the coordinate of an event in system K, it is not, in
general, the distance between origins of K and k.
'x' is a generic coordinate in system K and means a distance from the center of K to a point on the x-axis.
>
Since system k was placed with its center upon the x-axis and B in the center of k, the distance from A to B would actually be x.
Systems k and K are not even mentioned in part I.2. So "system k was
placed with its center upon the x-axis and B in the center of k"
is a figment of your imagination in no way related to A.E. article.
Wrong, because definitions remain valid throughout the entire paper, unless stated otherwise.
part I.3.
Sure, but apparently you wanted to discuss a certain equation form part 1.3 on page 3.If an author defines some variable or other setting and later 'foregets' this definition, all older settings remain valid.And definitely NOT a definition of k/K that is stated LATER, moreover
neither K nor k are mentions in part I.1.
It is a VERY bad idea, to 'fill the blancs' in a scientific text, because it would invite to see, what simply isn't there.What you apparently want is simply inexaptable:What I want is perfectly acceptable: that the reader has a functional
you want the reader to find out, which definition is valid at a certain position of the text and which one already expired.
brain.
Sure, you need to skip backwards, if you encounter a statement and simply forgot, what a certain symbol means.The author needs to stick to a certain setting, because otherwise a reader could not jump backwards with reading in a paper, if the setting changes.It is not needed here, neither backwards nor forwards.
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