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May 24 at 4:57 vote accept J. Casas
Apr 19 at 7:20 comment added KP Hart @JoelDavidHamkins You can blame H. H. Corson for the capital $\Sigma$
Apr 18 at 20:24 answer added KP Hart timeline score: 10
Apr 18 at 2:03 comment added Joel David Hamkins @StevenClontz Thanks for that. But in truth, I find that usage very odd.
Apr 18 at 1:48 comment added Steven Clontz @JDH in this context, the lower-case $\sigma$ product means finite support, not countable.
Apr 17 at 23:40 comment added Joel David Hamkins This looks helpful: matstud.org.ua/ojs/index.php/matstud/article/view/274
Apr 17 at 22:57 comment added Joel David Hamkins Should it be $\sigma$-product rather than $\Sigma$-product, since it means the countable-support product? This would align with $\sigma$-algebra, $\sigma$-additivity, and so forth.
Apr 17 at 22:23 history asked J. Casas CC BY-SA 4.0