On Mon, Nov 22, 2010 at 1:04 PM, Jacob Bishop <[email protected]>wrote:
> I'm not aware of the "correct way" to do this, but I personally use \times > inside a math environment. I use that anytime I want a Cartesian product. I > think the output looks the way it should using this method. So, you could > say A \in p \times q, or A^p\times q, which is also used. > Actually, A \in p\times q is not quite correct, it would be A \in R^p\times q or A \in C^p\times q. I hope you can decode what I mean. I've written it here how I would type it into a math environment. It would not paste correctly, though. Jacob
