A tutorial for the MAPLE ETA package
Pith reviewed 2026-05-24 23:23 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
The ETA MAPLE package proves eta-product identities by applying the valence formula to modular functions.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The ETA package is designed for proving eta-product identities using the valence formula for modular functions. Users input an eta-product, and the package computes its valence to determine whether the product equals a constant or satisfies a given identity.
What carries the argument
The valence formula for modular functions, which counts zeros inside a fundamental domain and is applied directly to eta-products to establish identities.
If this is right
- Users can verify eta-product identities by computing valence rather than performing manual order calculations at each cusp.
- The package handles the algebraic manipulations and modular transformations needed for eta-products in MAPLE.
- Identities that hold for eta-products can be confirmed as consequences of the valence being zero or matching a target value.
- The tool supports systematic checking of candidate identities in partition theory and q-series.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same valence-based approach could be adapted to prove identities involving other modular forms beyond pure eta-products.
- Extending the package to handle linear combinations or quotients of eta-products might reveal new families of identities.
- Integration with symbolic computation for generating candidate eta-products could turn the tool into an identity-discovery engine.
Load-bearing premise
The valence formula applies directly and correctly to the specific eta-products that users input into the package without additional unstated conditions or exceptions.
What would settle it
An eta-product input where the package outputs a proof of an identity that is later shown by hand to be false because the valence formula does not apply in that case.
read the original abstract
This is a tutorial for using ETA, a MAPLE package for calculating with Dedekind's eta function. The ETA package is designed for proving eta-product identities using the valence formula for modular functions.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript is a tutorial for the MAPLE ETA package, which computes with Dedekind's eta function and is designed for proving eta-product identities via the valence formula for modular functions.
Significance. If the underlying package correctly implements the valence formula without unstated exceptions, the tutorial could serve as a practical aid for researchers verifying eta-product identities in modular forms. The document advances no new mathematical claims, derivations, or predictions, and its value rests entirely on clear instructional content and reliable software.
major comments (1)
- [Abstract] Abstract: the description of the package's purpose provides no sample computations, identity proofs, error-handling examples, or verification against known results, which is load-bearing for assessing whether the tutorial successfully demonstrates correct application of the valence formula to user-input eta-products.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the feedback. The single major comment concerns the abstract, which we agree can be strengthened by incorporating illustrative material.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: the description of the package's purpose provides no sample computations, identity proofs, error-handling examples, or verification against known results, which is load-bearing for assessing whether the tutorial successfully demonstrates correct application of the valence formula to user-input eta-products.
Authors: We agree that the abstract as written is too terse. The body of the tutorial already contains worked examples, identity verifications, and usage notes, but the abstract itself does not preview them. In the revised manuscript we will expand the abstract by one or two sentences that include a short sample eta-product computation, a brief outline of a valence-formula proof, and a reference to a known identity that the package recovers correctly. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No significant circularity identified
full rationale
This is a tutorial document describing usage of the existing ETA Maple package for eta-product identities. It advances no novel derivations, predictions, fitted parameters, or mathematical claims. All content is instructional, referencing standard valence formula theory for modular functions without any self-referential reductions, self-citations as load-bearing premises, or renamings of results. The derivation chain is empty by design.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
Forward citations
Cited by 2 Pith papers
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Congruences modulo powers of $3$ for $6$-colored generalized Frobenius partitions
Proves congruences for cφ6(n) modulo 3^k by adapting Banerjee-Smoot methods to resolve a revised Gu-Wang-Xia conjecture.
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Congruences modulo powers of $3$ for generalized Frobenius partitions $C\Psi_{6,0}$
Proves congruences modulo powers of 3 for cψ_{6,0}(n) by connecting its generating function to cψ_{6,3}(n) via an Atkin-Lehner involution.
discussion (0)
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