S. Liao introduced a slightly more general version of symmetric products, called Γ-products for a subgroup Γ of the symmetric group
Sn. The operation was the same and hence he defined
XΓ =
Xn/Γ as the '
Γ-product of X
. That allowed him to study cyclic products', the special case for Γ being the
cyclic group, as well. When establishing the Dold-Thom theorem, they also considered the "
quotient group"
Z[
X] of SP(
X). This is the
free abelian group over
X with the basepoint as the zero element. If
X is a CW complex, it is even a
topological group. In order to equip this group with a topology,
Dold and
Thom initially introduced it as the following quotient over the infinite symmetric product of the
wedge sum of
X with a copy of itself: Let τ :
X ∨
X →
X ∨
X be interchanging the summands. Furthermore, let ~ be the
equivalence relation on SP(
X ∨
X) generated by :x\sim x+y+\operatorname{SP}(\tau)(y) for
x,
y ∈ SP(
X ∨
X). Then one can define
Z[
X] as :\mathbb{Z}[X] = \operatorname{SP}(X\vee X)/\sim. Since ~ is compatible with the addition in SP(
X ∨
X), one gets an associative and commutative addition on
Z[
X]. One also has the topological inclusions X ⊂ SP(
X) ⊂
Z[
X] and it can easily be seen that this construction has properties similar to the ones of SP, like being a functor. McCord gave a construction generalising both SP(
X) and
Z[
X]: Let
G be a monoid with identity element 1 and let (
X,
e) be a pointed set. Define :B(G,X) = \{ u\colon X\to G: u(e)=1 \text{ and } u(x)=1 \text{ for all but finitely many } x\in X \}. Then
B(
G,
X) is again a monoid under pointwise multiplication which will be denoted by ⋅. Let
gx denote the element of
B(
G,
X) taking the value
g at
x and being 1 elsewhere for
g ∈
G,
x ∈
X − {
e}. Moreover,
ge shall denote the function being 1 everywhere, the unit of
B(
G,
X). In order to install a topology on
B(
G,
X), one needs to demand that
X be
compactly generated and that
G be an abelian
topological monoid. Define
Bn(
G,
X) to be the subset of
B(
G,
X) consisting of all maps that differ from the constant function 1 at no more than
n points.
Bn(
G,
X) gets equipped with the final topology of the map :\begin{align} \mu_n\colon (G\times X)^n&\to B_n(G,X), \\ ((g_1,x_1),\dots,(g_n,x_n))&\mapsto g_1x_1\cdots g_nx_n. \end{align} Now,
Bn(
G,
X) is a closed subset of
Bn+1(
G,
X). Then
B(
G,
X) can be equipped with the direct limit topology, making it again a compactly generated space. One can then identify SP(
X) respectively
Z[
X] with
B(
N,
X) respectively
B(
Z,
X). Moreover,
B(⋅,⋅) is functorial in the sense that
B:
C ×
D →
C is a bifunctor for
C being the category of abelian topological monoids and
D being the category of pointed CW complexes. Here, the map
B(φ,
f) :
B(
G,
X) →
B(
H,
Y) for a morphism φ:
G →
H of abelian topological monoids and a continuous map
f:
X →
Y is defined as : B(\varphi, f)(g_1x_1\cdots g_nx_n) = (\varphi g_1)(fx_1)\cdots (\varphi g_n)(fx_n) for all
gi ∈
G and
xi ∈
X. As in the preceding cases, one sees that a based homotopy
ft :
X →
Y induces a homotopy
B(Id,
ft) :
B(
G,
X) →
B(
G,
Y) for an abelian topological monoid
G. Using this construction, the Dold-Thom theorem can be generalised. Namely, for a discrete module
M over a commutative ring with unit one has :[X,B(M,Y)]\cong \prod_{n=0}^\infty \tilde{H}^n(X,\tilde{H}_n(Y,M)) for based spaces
X and
Y having the homotopy type of a CW complex. Here,
H̃n denotes reduced homology and [
X,
Z] stands for the set of all based homotopy classes of basepoint-preserving maps
X →
Z. As
M is a module, [
X,
B(
M,
Y)] has an obvious group structure. Inserting
X =
Sn and
M =
Z yields the Dold-Thom theorem for
Z[
X]. It is noteworthy as well that
B(
G,
S1) is a
classifying space for
G if
G is a topological group such that the inclusion {1} →
G is a
cofibration. ==Notes==