Regarding my answer to the question here, it appears there may be a rendering bug.
In the third-last paragraph (only two other paragraphs following it in case that's an Australian phrase), I have a series of terms of the form 1/n
.
The actual question text which is meant to render this data is (I've inserted spaces around the numbers just to make it easier to compare line contents):
<code><sup>1</sup>/<sub> 4,194,304 </sub></code>,
<code><sup>1</sup>/<sub> 2,078,152 </sub></code>,
<code><sup>1</sup>/<sub> 1,048,576 </sub></code>,
<code><sup>1</sup>/<sub> 524,288 </sub></code>,
<code><sup>1</sup>/<sub> 131,072 </sub></code>,
<code><sup>1</sup>/<sub> 8,192 </sub></code>,
<code><sup>1</sup>/<sub> 4,096 </sub></code>,
<code><sup>1</sup>/<sub> 256 </sub></code>,
<code><sup>1</sup>/<sub> 128 </sub></code>,
<code><sup>1</sup>/<sub> 64 </sub></code>,
<code><sup>1</sup>/<sub> 32 </sub></code>, and
<code><sup>1</sup>/<sub> 8 </sub></code>.
Now most of these render okay but the final two appear to have the 1
rendered normally, not as a superscript:
I thought this might have to do with the fact that they're on a new line but changing the window size doesn't appear to affect the others:
That second graphic shows the difference between the sizes of the 1
characters much more clearly by the way.
Those images were taken from Microsoft Edge but I don't think it's a browser issue since Firefox does exactly the same thing.
Strangely enough, the exact same sequence renders fine here on Meta:
1/ 4,194,304
,
1/2,078,152
,
1/1,048,576
,
1/524,288
,
1/131,072
,
1/8,192
,
1/4,096
,
1/256
,
1/128
,
1/64
,
1/32
, and
1/8
.