I'm trying to understand the meaning of a general proposition stated by Gauss in a posthomous paper (this paper is in pp. 470-481 of volume 3 of Gauss's werke) on theta functions, a proposition which seems to serve as a guiding and organizing principle of the vast amount of relations among theta functions that he found.
Gauss's notation and definitions
Denote by $P(x,y),Q(x,y),R(x,y)$ the following functions:
$$P(x,y)=1+x(y+\frac{1}{y})+x^4(y^2+\frac{1}{y^2})+x^9(y^3+\frac{1}{y^3})+...$$ $$Q(x,y)= 1-x(y+\frac{1}{y})+x^4(y^2+\frac{1}{y^2})-x^9(y^3+\frac{1}{y^3})+...$$ $$R(x,y)=x^{\frac{1}{4}}(y^{\frac{1}{2}}+y^{-\frac{1}{2}})+x^{\frac{9}{4}}(y^{\frac{3}{2}}+y^{-\frac{3}{2}})+x^{\frac{25}{4}}(y^{\frac{5}{2}}+y^{-\frac{5}{2}})+...$$
These functions include Jacobi theta functions in their usual meaning as special cases; if $y$ is a complex number whose absolute value is $1$, and $z$ is defined to be a real number such that $y = e^{2iz}$, then we have:
$$P(x,y)=1+2cos(2z)x+2cos(4z)x^4+2cos(6z)x^9+...=\vartheta_3(z,x)$$
which follows from the identity $cos(2nz)= \frac{e^{2inz}+e^{-2inz}}{2}$. In paticular, we have:
$$P(x,1)=1+2x+2x^4+2x^9+...=\vartheta_3(0,x)$$, So one can understand $P(x,y),Q(x,y),R(x,y)$ as a generalization of Jacobi theta function $\vartheta(z,x)$ from purely real $z$ to a complex $z$ (non-zero imaginary part of z), so that $|y| \ne 1$.
Remark: I'm not very familiar with Jacobi's publications, so it's quite possible that Jacobi's original definition of his theta functions includes also the case when $z$ is complex, so Gauss's functions $P(x,y),Q(x,y),R(x,y)$ are nothing else than simply Jacobi's theta functions with different notation.
Gauss's theorem
On August 6, 1827, Gauss stated the following "general theorem":
$$P(x,ty)\cdot P(x,\frac{y}{t}) = P(x^2,t^2)P(x^2,y^2) + R(x^2,t^2)R(x^2,y^2) $$
and then goes on to derive a multitude of relations from it.
For more comprehensive background on this question, please look at the answer to HSM stackexchange post https://hsm.stackexchange.com/questions/6256/did-gauss-know-jacobis-four-squares-theorem.
Therefore, i'd like to know how to interpret the general theorem stated by Gauss.