@Air Both answers look fine to me. Do you mean the MathJax used to center the pictures?
If it isn't displaying properly in your browser, then it will likely happen to others. Since the goal was to make the answers look better, rather than worse, the MathJax should probably be removed.
I took the idea from one of the comments on this meta post.
@ChrisMueller Yeah - I know it was working fine yesterday, because I saw your edit that added the image and didn't see any wonky MathJax. But now it looks like this:
Look at it this way: Left-aligned images will be visible at any resolution. But as soon as you introduce an absolute offset, you introduce a dependency on your particular resolution - it won't be centered on other people's monitors, and in the worst case scenario you'll actually break the layout for someone.
Until we get a built-in solution for centering images, this is a very hacky workaround that could cause problems without solving any, IMO
A priest, a rabbi and an engineer walk into a bar. The bartender says, "What's an engineer doing in this joke?" at which point they are all deleted from the universe and moved to a private chat room.
Anyone object to referring to the frame in this question as a "T-frame?" I feel like that's how I would refer to it, and people would generally understand what is meant, but I'm not sure how standard it is
Aaaand now MathJax just isn't rendering at all for me.
Wow, I'm gone for a day and the chat room is filled with deleted posts. I feel as if I have missed ... nothing.
@Air "T-frame" seems reasonable. It is at least descriptive.
I have doubts that someone will end up searching for that same question in the future though.
user41796
11:15 PM
@hazzey The guilty parties involved have all duly served their chat timeouts for posting inappropriate content. Or jokes. Or whatever it was. Meh, who cares?