
You might know me from the CRF-polytopes section. I'm quite new to this section (and not plannig to contribute to this as much as the CRFs), and thus don't know much about toratopes. As far as I get it, toratopes are uniquely defined by the toratope notation, which works as follows:
-every I means another variable
-a set of parentheses mean you assign a radius to the distance of whatever is in these parentheses to the origin.
example: ((II)II)
start at the inside: (II)- two variables (x and y) are assigned a radius (thus x2+y2=R12 <=> sqrt(x2+y2)-R1=0)
next set of parentheses: the old equation (sqrt(x2+y2)-R1) and two new variables (z and w) are assigned a radius: (sqrt(x2+y2)-R1)2+z2+w2=R22
If we rewrite the "a2+b2+c2+d...=Rn2"-equation to |a,b,c,d,...|=Rn, we get the following:
||x,y|-R1,z,w|=R2
This is almost the same as ((II)II), so I guess this is how you derived the notation (no I am not going to read all 23 pages 'bout the tiger

Furthermore you should know that we have, not too long ago, found an interestion function. This function works on dynkin-style notation of polytopes, and makes this notation isiomorph to the coxeter group that is used. (a Coxeter-group is a kind of symmetry-group in this context). This has shown to have interesting properties.
I think I have discovered a way to connect these two branches in some manner, yielding toratopes with other symmetries.
The symmetry of toratopes basically is .2.2.2.-symmetry. This symmetry uses the normal coordinate system with (x,y,z,w)-coordinates. This symmetry also means that if (x,y,z,w) is on the toratope, then (±x,±y,±z,±w) is also on the toratope. There are thus exactly 24=16 points for every point that is on this (4-dimensional) toratope. These 16 points correspond to the elements of the coxeter-group .2.2.2. In general a coordinate in this group can be written as (x)2(y)2(z)2(w). The function that changes this coordinate into one of 16 others takes one number (say x), and change it into (-x). Furthermore the other values should be incremented with 2sin(90-180/n), where n is the number between these two values. (in this case n=2, so 2sin(90-180/n)=2sin(0)=0. and the values y,z and w shouldn't be changed at all)
Now instead of the .2.2.2.-group, one could try to use another group (say .4.3.3., the tesseractic group). Now coordinates are generally given by (a)4(b)3(c)3(d). Any coordinate (a)4(b)3(c)3(d) also implies the coordinates (-a)4(b+a*sqrt(2))3(c)3(d), (a+b*sqrt(2))4(-b)3(c+b)3(d), (a)4(b+c)3(-c)3(d+c) and (a)4(b)3(c+d)3(-d). This can then be re-used recursively to find a total of 48 implied coordinates. To define toratopes here we can take the derived definition: ||x,y|-R1,z,w|=R2. The ||-function should now be defined differently (or rather more generally). The distance between the origin according to a number of variables can be calculated in a way, but I don't know how. (Klitzing has a spreadsheed that does this, but that's pure magic to me (it uses matrices etc, way above my vector calculus


This is the general idea I had to make toratopes with other symmetries. I'm not sure if it will work directly this way, but we will see.