48293

2011Viral math puzzle / forum debate baitclassic

Also known as: 48/2(9+3) · The PEMDAS Debate

48÷2(9+3) is a 2011 viral math puzzle that divided the internet into two camps—those solving it as 288 and those as 2—exploiting ambiguity in order-of-operations interpretation.

48÷2(9+3) =? is a deliberately ambiguous math equation that split the internet into two warring camps: those who got 2 and those who got 288. First posted on a Texas message board in April 2011, the problem exploited a genuine gap in how people interpret the order of operations, sparking thousands of heated replies across dozens of forums within 48 hours.

TL;DR

48÷2(9+3) =? is a deliberately ambiguous math equation that split the internet into two warring camps: those who got 2 and those who got 288.

Overview

The equation 48÷2(9+3) looks like something a fifth-grader should be able to solve. That's exactly what makes it so effective as bait. The problem hinges on whether you treat the "2" next to the parentheses as implied multiplication (binding it tightly to the parenthetical expression) or as a separate operation that follows standard left-to-right processing after division3. Depending on your interpretation, you get either 2 or 288, and both answers have legitimate mathematical arguments behind them4.

The real trick is that the equation is poorly written on purpose. Professional mathematicians would never leave this kind of ambiguity in their work1. But stripped of context and thrown onto a forum full of people who believe math always has one right answer, it becomes a perfect engine for generating arguments.

On April 7th, 2011, a user named al_carl posted the equation to Hot Pursuit, a local Texas community message board4. He said his son had brought it home as homework the night before. Al_carl set up a poll with four answer choices: 2, 3.14, 219, and 288. The results split almost evenly, with 50 users choosing 2 and 55 choosing 2884. The thread drew 95 replies of increasingly heated arithmetic debate.

Origin & Background

Platform
Hot Pursuit (Texas message board)
Creator
al_carl
Date
2011
Year
2011

On April 7th, 2011, a user named al_carl posted the equation to Hot Pursuit, a local Texas community message board. He said his son had brought it home as homework the night before. Al_carl set up a poll with four answer choices: 2, 3.14, 219, and 288. The results split almost evenly, with 50 users choosing 2 and 55 choosing 288. The thread drew 95 replies of increasingly heated arithmetic debate.

How It Spread

The equation jumped platforms fast. On the same day it appeared on Hot Pursuit, someone reposted it to the Bodybuilding.com forums, where it racked up more than 2,500 replies. Also on April 7th, threads about the equation popped up on Physics Forums, Wall Street Oasis, MSU Red Cedar, Grass City, Tennis Warehouse, Inside MD Sports, and The Escapist. That evening, the question landed on Yahoo! Answers, where user Phyxius Ænimus broke down both approaches and noted that sometimes math genuinely doesn't provide a single definitive answer.

By April 8th, the equation had spread to Sneaker Talk forums, Yahoo! Answers Australia, and DIY Mobile Audio. The Michigan State 247sports board posted it with the explicit goal of watching "people on here call each other idiots". The Physics Forums thread noted that every forum discussing the problem was split roughly 50/50.

The Wall Street Oasis thread, revisited years later as a "Throwback Thursday" post, showed how the debate had legs. Even the site moderator Andy confessed he didn't want to read the whole thread and just guessed the answer was 2.

How to Use This Meme

The 48÷2(9+3) format typically works as engagement bait. People commonly post the equation (or a similar ambiguous expression) to a social media platform or forum with a prompt like "Can you solve this?" or "Only 1 in 10 people get this right." The resulting comment war between the "2" camp and the "288" camp generates massive engagement. Variations include changing the numbers while preserving the structural ambiguity between implied multiplication and left-to-right division. The key ingredient is always an expression where implied multiplication sits next to the ÷ symbol without clarifying parentheses.

Cultural Impact

The 48÷2(9+3) debate contributed to a broader wave of viral math problems that flooded social media throughout the 2010s. Slate's 2013 coverage framed these equations as exploiting the same kinds of ambiguities that make word riddles work, drawing on interviews with social psychologists and math historians to explain why people get so emotionally invested in arithmetic.

The debate also exposed real gaps in math education. The fact that PEMDAS, a mnemonic drilled into millions of American students, doesn't actually resolve every equation challenged the popular belief that math is always black and white. Several math educators used the viral equation as a teaching moment about the importance of clear notation and the limitations of mnemonics as mathematical rules.

Full History

The 48÷2(9+3) debate didn't emerge in a vacuum. It belongs to a broader genre of "viral math problems" designed to exploit ambiguities in mathematical notation, but this particular equation hit at a moment when forum culture was primed for exactly this kind of content.

The core mathematical dispute breaks down into several competing frameworks. The most common approach taught in American schools uses PEMDAS (Parentheses, Exponents, Multiplication, Division, Addition, Subtraction), which many students misinterpret as meaning multiplication always comes before division. Under a strict left-to-right interpretation of PEMDAS, you solve the parentheses first to get 48÷2(12), then divide 48 by 2 to get 24, then multiply by 12 to reach 288. Google and WolframAlpha both returned 288 when the equation was plugged in.

But there's a strong counter-argument rooted in how mathematicians actually write equations. The blog Lamrot Hakol made a case that implied multiplication (writing "2(12)" with no explicit × sign) creates a tighter binding than explicit multiplication. The blogger posed a thought experiment: if you saw 48÷2x, would you read that as (48÷2)×x or as 48÷(2x)? Most people intuitively read "2x" as a single unit. This intuition has real backing. Several academic and educational sources, including Purplemath, hold that implied multiplication outside parentheses gets higher precedence than division.

A Math Stack Exchange thread on the problem noted the key distinction: "48÷2c where c=9+3 yields 2, but 48÷2·c where c=9+3 yields 288". The difference between writing the multiplication sign and omitting it changed the answer entirely, which pointed to a genuine notational ambiguity rather than user error.

There's also a historical angle. As math historian Judy Grabiner of Pitzer College explained, order of operations conventions weren't always rigid. Before mass math education and the textbook industry standardized things around the turn of the 20th century, mathematicians would simply list their conventions at the start of their work. The ÷ symbol itself carries baggage. Historically, the obelus (÷) was sometimes used to mean "divide everything to the left by everything to the right," which would make 48÷2(9+3) equal to 48 over 2(12), giving an answer of 2.

Social psychologist Robert Glenn Howard of the University of Wisconsin-Madison explained why these threads got so vicious. People treat social media as a space for debate, and math riddles tap into the ancient human love of competitive puzzle-solving. The added pressure of an audience makes people dig in harder rather than reconsider. "It's very painful to fall on your face in front of your friends and family," noted Sian Beilock of the University of Chicago.

The equation's viral success also came from a deeper cultural tension: most people believe math is purely objective, with no room for ambiguity. Discovering that a simple-looking equation can have two defensible answers feels like a glitch in the universe. That cognitive dissonance kept people arguing for days, sometimes weeks, across hundreds of forums.

By 2013, Slate published a thorough breakdown of why these problems work, using the related equation 6÷2(1+2) as its example. The article concluded that there are at least three valid ways to interpret such equations, and none is strictly incorrect. The real answer, unsatisfying as it is, is that the equation is badly written and needs parentheses to clarify the author's intent.

The equation still surfaces periodically on social media whenever someone wants to generate easy engagement. Its power lies in its simplicity: anyone with a grade-school education feels qualified to answer, and the 50/50 split ensures maximum conflict in any comment section.

Fun Facts

The original Hot Pursuit poll included 3.14 (pi) and 219 as joke answer options alongside the two real contenders.

The Bodybuilding.com thread about the equation hit over 2,500 replies in a single day, making it one of the forum's most active non-fitness threads.

WolframAlpha and Google's calculator both return 288, while many scientific calculators that handle implied multiplication return 2.

The ÷ symbol (called an obelus) is so prone to causing confusion that ISO 80000-2 recommends against using it at all.

A Math Stack Exchange contributor demonstrated that simply replacing the parenthetical with a variable changes the answer most people give, even though the math is identical.

Derivatives & Variations

6÷2(1+2) =?

— A closely related equation that produces the same 50/50 split (answers: 1 or 9), featured in Slate's 2013 analysis[1].

Facebook/Twitter math bait

— A whole genre of "Only geniuses can solve this!" posts that use similar notational ambiguity to generate engagement[1].

Calculator comparison posts

— Users began posting screenshots of different calculators giving different answers to the same equation, showing how machines interpret the order of operations differently[4].

Frequently Asked Questions

48293

2011Viral math puzzle / forum debate baitclassic

Also known as: 48/2(9+3) · The PEMDAS Debate

48÷2(9+3) is a 2011 viral math puzzle that divided the internet into two camps—those solving it as 288 and those as 2—exploiting ambiguity in order-of-operations interpretation.

48÷2(9+3) =? is a deliberately ambiguous math equation that split the internet into two warring camps: those who got 2 and those who got 288. First posted on a Texas message board in April 2011, the problem exploited a genuine gap in how people interpret the order of operations, sparking thousands of heated replies across dozens of forums within 48 hours.

TL;DR

48÷2(9+3) =? is a deliberately ambiguous math equation that split the internet into two warring camps: those who got 2 and those who got 288.

Overview

The equation 48÷2(9+3) looks like something a fifth-grader should be able to solve. That's exactly what makes it so effective as bait. The problem hinges on whether you treat the "2" next to the parentheses as implied multiplication (binding it tightly to the parenthetical expression) or as a separate operation that follows standard left-to-right processing after division. Depending on your interpretation, you get either 2 or 288, and both answers have legitimate mathematical arguments behind them.

The real trick is that the equation is poorly written on purpose. Professional mathematicians would never leave this kind of ambiguity in their work. But stripped of context and thrown onto a forum full of people who believe math always has one right answer, it becomes a perfect engine for generating arguments.

On April 7th, 2011, a user named al_carl posted the equation to Hot Pursuit, a local Texas community message board. He said his son had brought it home as homework the night before. Al_carl set up a poll with four answer choices: 2, 3.14, 219, and 288. The results split almost evenly, with 50 users choosing 2 and 55 choosing 288. The thread drew 95 replies of increasingly heated arithmetic debate.

Origin & Background

Platform
Hot Pursuit (Texas message board)
Creator
al_carl
Date
2011
Year
2011

On April 7th, 2011, a user named al_carl posted the equation to Hot Pursuit, a local Texas community message board. He said his son had brought it home as homework the night before. Al_carl set up a poll with four answer choices: 2, 3.14, 219, and 288. The results split almost evenly, with 50 users choosing 2 and 55 choosing 288. The thread drew 95 replies of increasingly heated arithmetic debate.

How It Spread

The equation jumped platforms fast. On the same day it appeared on Hot Pursuit, someone reposted it to the Bodybuilding.com forums, where it racked up more than 2,500 replies. Also on April 7th, threads about the equation popped up on Physics Forums, Wall Street Oasis, MSU Red Cedar, Grass City, Tennis Warehouse, Inside MD Sports, and The Escapist. That evening, the question landed on Yahoo! Answers, where user Phyxius Ænimus broke down both approaches and noted that sometimes math genuinely doesn't provide a single definitive answer.

By April 8th, the equation had spread to Sneaker Talk forums, Yahoo! Answers Australia, and DIY Mobile Audio. The Michigan State 247sports board posted it with the explicit goal of watching "people on here call each other idiots". The Physics Forums thread noted that every forum discussing the problem was split roughly 50/50.

The Wall Street Oasis thread, revisited years later as a "Throwback Thursday" post, showed how the debate had legs. Even the site moderator Andy confessed he didn't want to read the whole thread and just guessed the answer was 2.

How to Use This Meme

The 48÷2(9+3) format typically works as engagement bait. People commonly post the equation (or a similar ambiguous expression) to a social media platform or forum with a prompt like "Can you solve this?" or "Only 1 in 10 people get this right." The resulting comment war between the "2" camp and the "288" camp generates massive engagement. Variations include changing the numbers while preserving the structural ambiguity between implied multiplication and left-to-right division. The key ingredient is always an expression where implied multiplication sits next to the ÷ symbol without clarifying parentheses.

Cultural Impact

The 48÷2(9+3) debate contributed to a broader wave of viral math problems that flooded social media throughout the 2010s. Slate's 2013 coverage framed these equations as exploiting the same kinds of ambiguities that make word riddles work, drawing on interviews with social psychologists and math historians to explain why people get so emotionally invested in arithmetic.

The debate also exposed real gaps in math education. The fact that PEMDAS, a mnemonic drilled into millions of American students, doesn't actually resolve every equation challenged the popular belief that math is always black and white. Several math educators used the viral equation as a teaching moment about the importance of clear notation and the limitations of mnemonics as mathematical rules.

Full History

The 48÷2(9+3) debate didn't emerge in a vacuum. It belongs to a broader genre of "viral math problems" designed to exploit ambiguities in mathematical notation, but this particular equation hit at a moment when forum culture was primed for exactly this kind of content.

The core mathematical dispute breaks down into several competing frameworks. The most common approach taught in American schools uses PEMDAS (Parentheses, Exponents, Multiplication, Division, Addition, Subtraction), which many students misinterpret as meaning multiplication always comes before division. Under a strict left-to-right interpretation of PEMDAS, you solve the parentheses first to get 48÷2(12), then divide 48 by 2 to get 24, then multiply by 12 to reach 288. Google and WolframAlpha both returned 288 when the equation was plugged in.

But there's a strong counter-argument rooted in how mathematicians actually write equations. The blog Lamrot Hakol made a case that implied multiplication (writing "2(12)" with no explicit × sign) creates a tighter binding than explicit multiplication. The blogger posed a thought experiment: if you saw 48÷2x, would you read that as (48÷2)×x or as 48÷(2x)? Most people intuitively read "2x" as a single unit. This intuition has real backing. Several academic and educational sources, including Purplemath, hold that implied multiplication outside parentheses gets higher precedence than division.

A Math Stack Exchange thread on the problem noted the key distinction: "48÷2c where c=9+3 yields 2, but 48÷2·c where c=9+3 yields 288". The difference between writing the multiplication sign and omitting it changed the answer entirely, which pointed to a genuine notational ambiguity rather than user error.

There's also a historical angle. As math historian Judy Grabiner of Pitzer College explained, order of operations conventions weren't always rigid. Before mass math education and the textbook industry standardized things around the turn of the 20th century, mathematicians would simply list their conventions at the start of their work. The ÷ symbol itself carries baggage. Historically, the obelus (÷) was sometimes used to mean "divide everything to the left by everything to the right," which would make 48÷2(9+3) equal to 48 over 2(12), giving an answer of 2.

Social psychologist Robert Glenn Howard of the University of Wisconsin-Madison explained why these threads got so vicious. People treat social media as a space for debate, and math riddles tap into the ancient human love of competitive puzzle-solving. The added pressure of an audience makes people dig in harder rather than reconsider. "It's very painful to fall on your face in front of your friends and family," noted Sian Beilock of the University of Chicago.

The equation's viral success also came from a deeper cultural tension: most people believe math is purely objective, with no room for ambiguity. Discovering that a simple-looking equation can have two defensible answers feels like a glitch in the universe. That cognitive dissonance kept people arguing for days, sometimes weeks, across hundreds of forums.

By 2013, Slate published a thorough breakdown of why these problems work, using the related equation 6÷2(1+2) as its example. The article concluded that there are at least three valid ways to interpret such equations, and none is strictly incorrect. The real answer, unsatisfying as it is, is that the equation is badly written and needs parentheses to clarify the author's intent.

The equation still surfaces periodically on social media whenever someone wants to generate easy engagement. Its power lies in its simplicity: anyone with a grade-school education feels qualified to answer, and the 50/50 split ensures maximum conflict in any comment section.

Fun Facts

The original Hot Pursuit poll included 3.14 (pi) and 219 as joke answer options alongside the two real contenders.

The Bodybuilding.com thread about the equation hit over 2,500 replies in a single day, making it one of the forum's most active non-fitness threads.

WolframAlpha and Google's calculator both return 288, while many scientific calculators that handle implied multiplication return 2.

The ÷ symbol (called an obelus) is so prone to causing confusion that ISO 80000-2 recommends against using it at all.

A Math Stack Exchange contributor demonstrated that simply replacing the parenthetical with a variable changes the answer most people give, even though the math is identical.

Derivatives & Variations

6÷2(1+2) =?

— A closely related equation that produces the same 50/50 split (answers: 1 or 9), featured in Slate's 2013 analysis[1].

Facebook/Twitter math bait

— A whole genre of "Only geniuses can solve this!" posts that use similar notational ambiguity to generate engagement[1].

Calculator comparison posts

— Users began posting screenshots of different calculators giving different answers to the same equation, showing how machines interpret the order of operations differently[4].

Frequently Asked Questions