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authorHolden Rohrer <hr@hrhr.dev>2021-01-20 15:40:01 -0500
committerHolden Rohrer <hr@hrhr.dev>2021-01-20 15:40:01 -0500
commitedf647d28e79929ecb13953d62b46ce27e192ef8 (patch)
treed29af24f968a040732aeb695543fd184b16370d1
parent8f143f73099c6cced85ed1b89039ceef4e97aec2 (diff)
fixed a % sign
-rw-r--r--src/analysis2.i4
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/src/analysis2.i b/src/analysis2.i
index d328978..56c54ea 100644
--- a/src/analysis2.i
+++ b/src/analysis2.i
@@ -30,7 +30,7 @@ erasure trial. The same results are shown across the trial with fake
pits, where the number of reclusive antlions increased from one to four,
and the obstacle trial, where the amount of reclusive antlion increased
from zero to three. In summary, the number of reclusive antlions
-increased by an average of 2.333 antlions, or an increase of 233.3%,
+increased by an average of 2.333 antlions, or an increase of 233.3\%,
which marks quite a significant change. This change indicates that the
introduction of various obstacles and interference in other modes of
communication can change the natural settlement patterns of the
@@ -43,7 +43,7 @@ competition, which in turn helps the species reproduce more as a whole,
thereby explaining the phenomenon. Along with this, a dramatic change
in the cannibalistic nature of the antlions was noticed once various
obstacles were introduced, as it was noted in the previous study that
-the number of cannibalized antlions increased by an average of 13.9785%
+the number of cannibalized antlions increased by an average of 13.9785\%
when the trial size was reduced with no obstacles or communication
interference. This differs from the trend in cannibalism noted
throughout the following trials, as the data clearly shows how the rate