Suppose we have an arbitrary sequence $$\{a_k\} = \{a_1, a_2, ..., a_k\} $$
and use it to a create a set as follows
$$A = (a_i+ a_j : a_i, a_j \in \{a_k\})$$
and we wanted to sum over all of the members of this set, would we denote it as $\sum A$ ?
Furthermore, if we wanted to create a new set $A^*$ which excludes terms $a_i + a_j$ if $i=j$, how could we write that more succinctly?
How about if we wanted to exclude terms $a_j + a_i$ aswell? i.e. $a_i + a_j$ in reverse order?
Ultimately, I'm looking for notation akin to summing over all "unique pairwise sums" of the members of a set (something like $\sum B$ where $b := a_i + a_j$ and $b \in B$) excluding the cases where $i=j$, and excluding all the "duplicate pairwise sums" of the form $a_j + a_i$ given that they're not "unique" ($a_j + a_i$ is given to be "equivalent" to $a_i + a_j$)
I'm assuming there is a more succinct way to write "the sum of all unique pair-wise sums of the members of a set", because I vaguely remember notation form probability theory to denote "all pairs from a set where order doesn't matter"... something to do with binomials if I remember correctly.
Apologies in advance for my drawn out description... Any better notation that captures what I'm trying to capture would be much appreciated.