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You've been told to write more concisely for professional purposes, but sometimes clarity can be a buzzkill. Leave your resistance at the door and get ready to embrace the eccentricity of brevity - CalcVectorialDeMoisesLazaro is a series of short poems about fractals, mathematical functions, and geometry that sparkle with wit and style. From the "lazy eye" poem to "anatomy of a triangle," these dazzling pieces will delight anyone who loves language play and innovative poetic technique. Welcome to CalcVectorialDeMoisesLazaro! Here you'll find a new collection every Wednesday. Thank you for stopping by. This poem can be read as a commentary on the use of fractal geometry to model the brain of a cat, modeled after an equation of feline intelligence. The formula refers to the Hausdorff–Young dimension, which is equal to 1/2 log 2/ log γ, where γ is the genus of the object under consideration (i.e., how many holes it has). For example, a doughnut has genus 1, which leaves it with Hausdorff-Young dimension 0; thus this would be represented as 1 - 0 = 0. If you cannot feel the full brilliance of this mathematical equation, then you have got some work to do. For everyone else, enjoy! SEMSOIOSOIOSOIOIOSOIIOEDOHOHOEDOHOHHOEHHOEHHOEHHOEHHEHHHEHHEEHDEHUESODEUESODEDESODEESOD' Like most poems published on the internet, the structure of CalcVectorialDeMoisesLazaro is largely arbitrary. As I write them, they develop organically - whether I'm trying to tell a story or explore a theme, their length and content reflects that of each piece. Still, if you were visually inclined, you might notice a pattern in how my poems are constructed. I tend to use lines of varying lengths and space them inconsistently - the effect of this is one of a constantly undulating beat. In fact, most verses of my poems dance around a central number that is somewhat mathematical in nature. The first eleven articles on the website began every stanza with a word that began with "S", which included "Semifractal," "Sinusoidal," and "Sinusoidal." I don't really have any reason for this formula, it just seemed like something I would have done as a kid making up my own riffs on popular music. In any case, after eleven articles, I was completely out of words that began with "S", which is probably a good thing. Now, when I add new content to the website, I add it in a way that will preserve this overall structure based on the number eleven. So far this has worked, and my poems have contained no fewer than eleven lines and no more than thirty-six lines. Not only does this make for a pleasing visual experience, but it also makes a nice mathematical pattern. On June 11th of 2015 I wrote this article instead of adding new content to the website - it's just an explanation for why there's been no new material added in almost two years. cfa1e77820
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