For an HTML interface to this directory, point your Web browser at http://www.math.lsa.umich.edu/~jrs/archive.html Files ending in .gz are gzip'd. Use gunzip to decompress on a UNIX system. CONTENTS: I. Coxeter graph paper A2.ps # A2 paper B2.ps # B2 paper G2.ps # G2 paper affhyp # Maple source code II. Tables of Jack symmetric functions Jack1-9.dat.gz Jack10.dat.gz Jack11.dat.gz Jack12.dat.gz Jack13.dat.gz Jack14.dat.gz Jack15.dat.gz Jack16.dat.gz jacktools # the Maple source code III. Tables of q,t-Kostka polynomials. K4.gz K5.gz K6.gz K7.gz K8.gz K9.gz K10.gz After decompression, the result is a Maple file (plain text) containing a table() data structure. The name of the table is the name of the file. Example of use in a Maple session: > read K5; > K5[[3,1,1],[3,2]]; 3 3 2 2 q t + q t + 2 q t + q + q t Warning: The K10 table is *large*. After decompression, it takes up 800KB of disk space. It takes 5MB of RAM (at least on my machine) just to read it in during a Maple session. You may want to save these tables in Maple '.m' format, since the files will load *much faster* and efficiently. I have not distributed the files in '.m' format, since Maple seems to change this format with every new release. Here is Maple code for converting to '.m': for n from 4 to 10 do read K.n; save K.n, K.n.`.m`; od;