It never occurred to me that folks might have trouble remembering which was
X and which was Y.  Good thing I never taught analytic geometry, eh?  

Perhaps it was because I learned the number line first.  Then when we added
a second line running up and down, the first line was "x" and the second
line was "y".  And when we added a third line coming straight out of the
paper, that was z.  

I presume that when they added a fourth line for time, that could be T, but
now that the universe has at least seven dimensions, I haven't the foggiest
what they do.  It wasn't mentioned in the thread I read on SF.fandom, where
various engineers were complaining that other engineers used the wrong
conventions.   -1^-2, for example, is "i" everywhere except in electrical
engineering, where it's "j", to distinguish it from current.  "i" and "j"
never bugged me -- I'm too aware that "j" is a variant form of "i" -- but I
learned that they *swap* some conventions:  what should be theta is phi, and
what should be phi is theta.  That would be a much bigger hassle than
variations on the BCC ever thought about being!

It could crash a spaceship, now that you mention it . . . 

-- 
Joy Beeson
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://home.earthlink.net/~joybeeson/
http://home.earthlink.net/~beeson_n3f/ 
west of Fort Wayne, Indiana, U.S.A.
where it's cold and wet.

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