In the calculation of alternating current phenomena by means of complex quantities, as a rule, the rectangular components of the vector are used, and the rectangular form involving the operator

is more common than the polar or exponential forms which involve the operators (cos θ + j sin θ) or j
θ; although it is recognized that the latter are very convenient in certain cases. A simple method for dealing directly with the vectors themselves is described in the paper and it consists in introducing the operator j
n, where n, contrary to ordinary usage, may be any positive or negative fraction. Just as j or j
1 rotates the quantity before which it is placed through 1 × 90 degrees, so j
n rotates the number into which it is multiplied through n × 90 degrees. The operator j
n follows the rules of ordinary algebra and according to these the different algebraic operations of multiplication etc., are developed in section II. In section III a few illustrative problems are given; these are followed by a critical resume in section IV. At the end, for convenience of reference a summary of formulas is given, and a very short bibliography is included.