CircleTimes[x]
displays as .
CircleTimes[x,y,…]
displays as .


CircleTimes 
CircleTimes[x]
displays as .
CircleTimes[x,y,…]
displays as .
Details

- CircleTimes[x,y,…] has no built-in meaning.
is by default interpreted as CircleTimes[x,y].
can be entered as \[CircleTimes] or
c*
.
Examples
open all close allBasic Examples (3)
A CircleTimes expression is formatted as an -ary operation with operator ⊗:
Input using the ⊗ operator is interpreted as a CircleTimes expression:
CircleTimes has no built-in meaning or symbolic operations:
Scope (1)
CircleTimes for various numbers of arguments:
Tech Notes
History
Introduced in 1996 (3.0)
Text
Wolfram Research (1996), CircleTimes, Wolfram Language function, https://reference.wolfram.com/language/ref/CircleTimes.html.
CMS
Wolfram Language. 1996. "CircleTimes." Wolfram Language & System Documentation Center. Wolfram Research. https://reference.wolfram.com/language/ref/CircleTimes.html.
APA
Wolfram Language. (1996). CircleTimes. Wolfram Language & System Documentation Center. Retrieved from https://reference.wolfram.com/language/ref/CircleTimes.html
BibTeX
@misc{reference.wolfram_2025_circletimes, author="Wolfram Research", title="{CircleTimes}", year="1996", howpublished="\url{https://reference.wolfram.com/language/ref/CircleTimes.html}", note=[Accessed: 08-August-2025]}
BibLaTeX
@online{reference.wolfram_2025_circletimes, organization={Wolfram Research}, title={CircleTimes}, year={1996}, url={https://reference.wolfram.com/language/ref/CircleTimes.html}, note=[Accessed: 08-August-2025]}