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When in doubt, use the reference manual (your local version can be displayed in your nrowser by typing manual(), and is also one of the items of the Help tab of Jupyter notebook).

For example, searching for QQbar (the Search dialog is right under the Sage logo at the top left of the manual page), gives you a (long) sequence of occurrences of the "QQbar" string in Sage documentation. The first item points to the documentation you are searching.

It might be useful to search for the "canonical" name of afield rather than its "nickname" of more common use ; for example, searching for AlgebraicRealField leads you directly to its documentation, whereas searching for AA gives you a realy long list of matches...

HTH,

When in doubt, use the reference manual (your local version can be displayed in your nrowser by typing manual(), and is also one of the items of the Help tab of Jupyter notebook).

For example, searching for QQbar (the Search dialog is right under the Sage logo at the top left of the manual page), gives you a (long) sequence of occurrences of the "QQbar" string in Sage documentation. The first item points to the documentation you are searching.

It might be useful to search for the "canonical" name of afield rather than its "nickname" of more common use ; for example, searching for AlgebraicRealField leads you directly to its documentation, whereas searching for AA gives you a realy really long list of matches...

HTH, HTH,

When in doubt, use the reference manual (your local version can be displayed in your nrowser Browser by typing manual(), and is also one of the items of the Help tab of Jupyter notebook).

For example, searching for QQbar (the Search dialog is right under the Sage logo at the top left of the manual page), gives you a (long) sequence of occurrences of the "QQbar" string in Sage documentation. The first item points to the documentation you are searching.

It might be useful to search for the "canonical" name of afield a ring/field rather than its "nickname" of more common use ; for example, searching for AlgebraicRealField leads you directly to its documentation, whereas searching for AA gives you a really long list of matches...

HTH,