<p>E + (2/3)(Pi - E) = 3</p>
<p>hey, they haven't been proven algebraically independent yet. unlike pi and e^pi.</p>
<p>OMG!!! (pi^4+pi^5)^(1/6) = e!!!!!!!!111</p>
<p>sorry, couldn't resist :-P</p>
<p>The sad thing is that I actually went to check how true that is.</p>
<p>me too.</p>
<p>.</p>
<p>pi/e = (pi - e)/e + 1</p>
<p>e/pi = (e - pi)/pi + 1 ;)</p>
<p>wow i have no idea what is going on. it looks suspiciously like elementary algebra though</p>
<p>I know.... maybe I should write a paper proving that it's true... and publish in Annals of Mathematics... do you think I'd be successful, Ben?</p>
<p>lol</p>
<p>Ben - Tom = 0</p>
<p>You're nothing without me, ben. What is a master with no student? Burn.</p>
<p>==> Ben = Tom (?)</p>
<p>P = NP iff N = 1 or P = 0</p>
<p>Yes, Ben. You now understand, and the circle is complete!</p>