@freemo 
Not really. Did the subtraction, and get:
\[\ -3 \cdot \infty = \frac{1}{4}\]
Surely I am doing the wrong thing?
@design_RG yup, isolate the \(\infty\) and it might give you a hint as to the source of the joke.. if not ill give you the whole bit
@freemo Thank you!
I already enjoyed seeing how you did the nice formatting - exposed in teh Toot editor when I was responding. Very nice result.
Will need to think about the meaning, next step or get the joke. 😉
@freemo That is a nice explanation. Very rarefied territory. Wow. 😮
@design_RG Its a common math joke, people say \(\infty = -\frac{1}{12}\) for the lawls.
@design_RG Well thats the joke. In reality no mathematician is claiming that infinity is equal to \(-\frac{1}{12}\) thats the joke.
What they are claiming however is that depending on what process you use to sum up all the natural numbers, you will get either infinity or \(-\frac{1}{12}\). In other words it is another (valid) way to sum the infinite series to get a real value.
As a bit of an analogy we know the roots of 100 are both -10 and 10. But despite that fact we can not go so far as to claim -10 and 10 are equal to each other.