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Please refer the image given below. Is there a way to let the LaTeX package Polynom also do division in ascending powers of x as given in the figure or any other package of LaTex is able to do this?

schremmer
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    What? Are you talking about Latex? Are you referring to a specific package? Could you provide a MWE? – Clément Dec 23 '15 at 20:21
  • No, the package only uses descending order. – egreg Dec 23 '15 at 20:43
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    This should not have been closed. Please wait at least 24 hours after asking the OP for improvements to the question before voting to close. Also, if you downvote, please don't forget to revert the vote after the question is improved. – Martin Schröder Dec 23 '15 at 20:51
  • @egreg I know but I was hoping that just as you were once able to let it show $0x^{n}$ you might be able to work your magic once again. – schremmer Dec 24 '15 at 22:26
  • I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it's a feature request for a package that, in the current version, does not offer such a functionality. – egreg Dec 28 '15 at 00:59
  • The example I gave was in LaTeX.
  • I mentioned specifically the package Polynom.
  • I gave a MWE done by hand precisely because I could not do it otherwise.
  • egreg voted to close on Dec 28, 2015 because, he said, it was a feature request for a package. But you might also say that I was "just" asking for a hack to reverse the descending order of the package.
  • In any case, I still don't understand how it is off topic', how I lackeddetails and/or clarity'.

    – schremmer Mar 12 '23 at 07:00
  • @Hendrik Vogt It seems you are the only one who might consider. By the way, I just realized that it wasn't I who did the edit and, most importantly, the figure. I apologize for giving a false impression and am grateful to the Bot. – schremmer Mar 16 '23 at 20:29