User blog:Bubby3/Comparison of the separator comparing process of SAN and BAN

I am comparing the pDAN comapring rules and the Nested array notation comparing rules

Steps 1 and 2 in  BAN  just store entires, and SAN doesn't do that

Step 1 in SAN just reduces the seperator, and BAN doesn't do that when comapring  seperators.

Step 2 in SAN just says what the varibles are and BAN does that with words.

Step 3 in BAN isn't mostly used expect when one or both of the seperators have 1 entry. If one has one entry and the other has multiple entries, it is the same as if their levels were higher. If both of them have 1 entry, the fourth line of that rule corresponds with going to step 4. This serves the purpose of step 3. The nesting level is useless after nested array notation because [1\2] has a higher lever but has a lower nesting level than [1[1[1[2]2]2]2], for example.

Step 4 in BAN corresponds to steps 5-6, which involves finding the highest leved seperator, and whichever one has the higher highest seperator has the highest level.

Step 5 in BAN corresponds to step 7 in SAN, which counts how many of the higest level seperator they are.

Step 6 in BAN corresponds to step 9 in SAN.

Step 7 in BAN corresponds to step 4 in SAN.

Step 8 in BAN corresponds with step 10 in SAN.

So the systems of comparing seperators have a lot of simiarities, and step 5 is just a fancy way of saying the highest-leveled seperator in a seperator.