OOC, and in the wrong journal, but.eleventh_doctorAugust 29 2007, 14:01:58 UTC
...Well, no. It actually ought to come out as one, two, three. 1/3 times 1 over 1/3. To get rid of the fraction in the fraction, you flip the 1/3 into 3/1 and multiply it by 1/1. So then you have 1/3 times 3/1, which equals one. :D
It's part of the cantor set. *nodnod* Alt!Koschei refused to post the traditional 'testing, one, two, three,' so I hid it in the one third times one over one minus two-thirds, and posted it while he was distracted by the set itself. (Translation: I'm easily distracted. OH HAI LOOK THAR SHINY.)
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It's part of the cantor set. *nodnod* Alt!Koschei refused to post the traditional 'testing, one, two, three,' so I hid it in the one third times one over one minus two-thirds, and posted it while he was distracted by the set itself.
(Translation: I'm easily distracted. OH HAI LOOK THAR SHINY.)
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