#91 from Coon's Salary Cap FAQ
For example, if a player on the last year of his rookie scale contract earns $5 million in 2018-19, and his contract is extended for four seasons starting at $10 million, with 5% raises, then his salary in each season will be:
Season Salary
2018-19 $5,000,000
2019-20 $10,000,000
2020-21 $10,500,000
2021-22 $11,000,000
2022-23 $11,500,000
If this player is traded during the 2018-19 season, then his outgoing salary from the sending team's perspective is his actual salary -- $5 million. But the player's incoming salary from the receiving team's perspective is $9.6 million -- the average of all five seasons. Such a player would be very difficult to trade -- a legal trade can only be accomplished if both teams add additional salary to the transaction, or if they include a third team that is able to absorb excess salary.
You understand that what you posted doesn’t talk about when a player can be traded, right? It only talks about how to match salaries in the event a player who signed a rookie extension is traded. So, for example, Jamal Murray signed his extension in July, and could thus be traded in January, 6 months later. If that happened, the rules you quote would apply to how his salary would be counted.
Those rules would apply to Jaylen, too, if he were traded in June, after the season is over. You’re not wrong about how the salary calculation is performed (I cited those rules myself when I explained this to you the first time). But you are wrong about when he can be traded. I quoted the CBA for you. Please just listen and stop posting Jaylen trades until the offseason.