User talk:Arydye001

User:Fishpi
I know if you've been looking for other people to work on the Abstract Algebra book and I independently notices that User:Fishpi has been working on Abstract Algebra/Clifford Algebras. But since he has never edited the same pages has you he might not have seen the comments you've left on the talk pages. It might be worth dropping a note on his talk page. I am on a wikibreak but will be back in a month or two, at which point I will be happy to work on the book with you. Thenub314 ( talk ) 10:15, 26 July 2010 (UTC)

Thank you very much. That would be very nice. Arydye001 (talk) 19:27, 26 July 2010 (UTC)

Classification
Please add BookCat to pages you create so they are indexed and automatically put in alphabetical order in the Abstract Algebra category. This lets people review unreviewed pages using the flagged revisions system or perform maintenance on the entire book with bots. Thanks. – Adrignola talk 19:13, 26 July 2010 (UTC)

Thank you very much for the notice. I will try to remember to add whenever I start a page.

Question
I was working on C++'s STL iterators and on the issue of range notation I would like to point to another book. Do you know any usable location (I could use wikipedia's Interval (mathematics) ) but I would prefer using in house content. I've taken a look and couldn't find one. Another issue is in regards to notation for example in the example of half open range someone used the [x,y) notation I've always used the [x,y[, do you know what is the more common one ?
 * Algebra/Interval_Notation is only black and white, but the pages does explain intervals.
 * In high school in the u.s.a, they use [x,y).
 * Thanks. --Panic (talk) 15:37, 30 July 2010 (UTC)