Searching for "punctuation after equation" didn't turn up anything here so I'll post this as a new question.
This question (on a different site) in its entirety:
I was wondering where does the formula for redshift $$z=\frac vc$$ come from? Can it be derived from the definition of redshift $$z={\lambda_{observed} - \lambda_{emitted}\over \lambda_{emitted}}$$ ?
Question: In Math SE proper how do you recommend people end a sentence that contains an equation just before the final punctuation, especially if that punctuation is a question mark?
To some (including me) the proximity of the question mark to the equation can make it look like it's not a sentence, but that the equation itself is questionable, or that there is a missing variable or expression that's been replaced with a question mark (i.e. "something goes here, but I don't know what").
As another example, I just wrote the comment:
There was a typo in my third equation, it should read $$i_{sup} = I k + J (-l).$$ Does that change your $B$ to $$B = \begin{pmatrix} \frac{7}{2} & +1 \\ \frac{\sqrt{3}}{2} & 2\sqrt{3} \\ \end{pmatrix}?$$