I would like you to stay on the topic with the expression that has the pair of parentheses removed:
1+sqrt(3)+sqrt(5)-sqrt(15)/sqrt(2). In particular, it has to do with the sqrt(15)/sqrt(2) part. There is
no ambiguity in that part being equivalent to \(\displaystyle \dfrac{ \sqrt{15}}{ \sqrt{2}}. \) This is true, because the square roots are executed
first and then the quotient is done.
If the grouping symbols were placed differently as sqrt(15/sqrt(2)), then there would be no ambiguity
in that being equivalent to \(\displaystyle \sqrt{ \dfrac{15}{ \sqrt{2}}}. \)
This is my world of expertise of grouping symbol placement and the non-ambiguity of these expressions.
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By the way, tfmcbride's form of the expression in post #8 did not give me any doubts because I saw/see
matching parentheses. Then, I cut-and-pasted that expression of his/her into WolframAlpha and saw
that it matched the value given by tfmcbride in the top of his/her post # 6.