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A tactic macromolecule in the IUPAC definition is a macromolecule in which essentially all the configurational (repeating) units are identical. In a hydrocarbon macromolecule with all carbon atoms making up the backbone in a tetrahedral molecular geometry, the zigzag backbone is in the paper plane with the substituents either sticking out of the paper or retreating into the paper;[excessive detail?], this projection is called the Natta projection after GiulioNatta.[not verified in body] Tacticity is particularly significant in vinyl polymers of the type -H 2C-CH(R)- where each repeating unit with a substituent R on one side of the polymer backbone is followed by the next repeating unit with the substituent on the same side as the previous one, the other side as the previous one or positioned randomly with respect to the previous one.[needs copy edit], Monotactic macromolecules have one stereoisomeric atom per repeat unit,[not verified in body]ditactic to n-tactic macromolecules have more than one stereoisomeric atom per unit.[not verified in body]
The orderliness of the succession of configurational repeating units in the main chain of a regular macromolecule, a regular oligomer molecule, a regular block, or a regular chain.[2]