I agree. The table at the end makes it all clear.

On 4/1/07, Roger Hui <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I think you misunderstand the second example.
It says:

 The four 5x6 2-cells are arranged as a vector
 of 2-cells; this is the meaning of their frame.

Each of the 2-cells (rank 2) cells has shape 5 6.
The frame is ,4 .  The frame catenated with the
cell shape is (,4) catenated with 5 6, or 4 5 6.



----- Original Message -----
From: Terrence Brannon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Sunday, April 1, 2007 2:41 pm
Subject: [Jgeneral] "J for C Programmers" - the frame, concatenated with the 
shape of the cells is not equal to the shape of the noun.

> <quote href = http://www.jsoftware.com/help/jforc/declarations.htm >
>
> the frame, concatenated with the shape of the cells, will be equal to
> the shape of the noun.
>
> < / quote >
>
> However, in the second given example, the frame is 5 6 the shape of
> the cells is 4
> Their concatenation is 5 6 4
>
> But the shape of the noun is 4 5 6
>
> Therefore the concatenation is equal to some permutation of the shape
> of the noun but not necessarily equal to the shape of the noun.
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