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::I've moved the paragraph "The '''C'''<sup>''n''</sup> space" to the last, because it brings an example of Stein manifold but it needs a lots of efforts to reach it. Cousin problem, Levi problem, and the development of several complex variables must be explained, I think.--[[User:Enyokoyama|Enyokoyama]] ([[User talk:Enyokoyama|talk]]) 10:00, 23 March 2015 (UTC)
==Assessment comment==
{{Substituted comment|length=175|lastedit=20070416120857|comment=Needs splitting into sections, comparisons with single-variable case, examples, why they are "supposed to be" analytic, etc. [[User:Tompw|Tompw]] 13:29, 20 November 2006 (UTC)}}
Substituted at 02:35, 5 May 2016 (UTC)
==Fix the ambiguous use of "these" and "they"==
If the intended meaning of the first paragrah is that the theory of several complex variables studies only holomorphic functions then first sentence in the paragraph should say so. As the current article stands, the first sentence speaks of complex valued functions on complex n-tuples. The next sentence in the article says that "these function" are "not just any functions". It is unclear which functions "these functions" refers to.
It would be clearer if the article began: "The theory of several complex variables deals with with a special type of complex valued functions on n-tuples of complex numbers. The functions of this special type are the holomorphic functions." - if that is the intended meaning.
[[User:Tashiro~enwiki|Tashiro~enwiki]] ([[User talk:Tashiro~enwiki|talk]]) 07:38, 23 June 2016 (UTC)
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