That’s just you. Your web browser is not running Javascript, you don’t have the fonts, or something. I see the division as I wrote it in Firefox: http://i.imgur.com/c2U2R.png
I couldn’t tell from the screenshot what browser and OS you’re using but for me
(on Linux), it shows up as “100×10002” in Chrome but as a (correct) fraction in
Firefox (3.5). In both it acts like “100×10002″ in the contexts of searching
and copying/pasting.
That’s just you. Your web browser is not running Javascript, you don’t have the fonts, or something. I see the division as I wrote it in Firefox: http://i.imgur.com/c2U2R.png
I see the HTML source uses MathML:
I couldn’t tell from the screenshot what browser and OS you’re using but for me (on Linux), it shows up as “100×10002” in Chrome but as a (correct) fraction in Firefox (3.5). In both it acts like “100×10002″ in the contexts of searching and copying/pasting.
Ditto—on Arch linux, chrome with javascript enabled does not work; firefox 3.6 does.
Correct. The Javascript is because apparently browsers have to be forced to render the MathML; I don’t understand the details.
Debian unstable’s Iceweasel.
I tried three browsers and in none of them did javascript make a difference. (I had both success and failure.)
(Just in case it wasn’t clear, I do have JavaScript enabled in Chrome.)