extended code obtained/obtained extended code.

galois

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Hello friends,

I have the following sentence:

However, by allowing x=0 in Theorem3, Theorem 6 shows us that the extended code obtained/obtained extended code is a two-weight linear code which results to be optimal.

My question is the following: Does 'obtained' come before or after 'extended code'?

Thank you very much for your help.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
I would write:
However, by allowing x=0 in Theorem 3, Theorem 6 shows us that the extended code obtained is a two-weight linear code which results to be are optimal.

"Obtained" as a participle is usually written after a noun.
Not that I know what the sentence means.
 
Neither "... which to be optimal" nor "... which are optimal" make grammatical sense at the end.

@galois I think you're going to need someone who's conversant with this technical jargon to help you with the rest of it.
 
@galois, please note that I've changed your thread title.

Titles must contain some or all of the words or phrases being asked about.
 
Neither "... which to be optimal" nor "... which are optimal" make grammatical sense at the end.

@galois I think you're going to need someone who's conversant with this technical jargon to help you with the rest of it.

What I mean is:

However, by allowing x=0 in Theorem3, Theorem 6 shows us that the extended code obtained is a two-weight linear code which results/turns out to be optimal.

That is, if we allow an extra condition in Theorem 3, then Theorem 6 not only produces a linear code but an optimal one. And everybody loves an optimal linear code in Coding Theory.
 
However, by allowing x=0 in Theorem 3, Theorem 6 shows us that the extended code obtained is a two-weight linear code the results of which are optimal.
 
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