Hi Waldek,

On 09.01.21 13:01, Waldek Hebisch wrote:
> On Sat, Jan 09, 2021 at 12:24:47PM +0100, Ralf Hemmecke wrote:
>>> 2. As Waldek said, '%iint" should be used only internally.  But the
>>> following workaround prints '%iint' as 'iint':
>>
>> What would that help? Whether it prints as %iint or iint, I still would
>> not know how to interpret that FriCAS is returning. What does '%iint'
>> stand for?
> 
> Indefinite integral (== general Liouvillian function).  Main reason
> of using '%' is to avoid clashes with user-defined things.
> Uninterned symbols would be better to avoid clashes, but would
> complicate debugging...

The % sign is only a minor problem.
But what is the meaning of

                  log(- e x + 1)   log(- e x + 1)
      %iint(e,x,- --------------,- --------------)
                         e                x

? It would be good to know (and best specified in the code) even if it
is not intended to be visible to an enduser.

Ralf

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