Addressing issue #33 the numerical illustration in the vignette exhibits many rows with zeros. These are here because of slight numerical roundoff errors: the value is theoretically zero but numerically nonzero; the rows are not suppressed by the package but the print method prints a zero which is contradictory. This spoils the example; the package needs something like zap() from the clifford package.
Addressing issue #33 the numerical illustration in the vignette exhibits many rows with zeros. These are here because of slight numerical roundoff errors: the value is theoretically zero but numerically nonzero; the rows are not suppressed by the package but the print method prints a zero which is contradictory. This spoils the example; the package needs something like
zap()
from the clifford package.