In 2005, Lu Chao of China set a world record by reciting the first 67,890 digits of pi from memory.
rajveer meena
actually, pi is a non-terminating decimal, which means it goes on forever. but the longest i can find is 31 decimal places long. 3.1415926535897932384626433832795The current record for the decimal expression of pi is 5 trillion digits.See related link below for reference
Normally one decimal place is appropriate.
You record the temperatures as decimal numbers and subtract the smaller from the larger.
It's possible to work out the digits in the decimal expansion of pi via many methods. The simplest to explain is to measure a large circle with a tape measure, but there are many better, more mathematical algorithms, and computer programs developed specifically for calculating pi. The current world record is 1,241,100,000,000 decimal digits. That's more than a trillion: http://www.super-computing.org/pi_current.html See here for more: https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/Computing_%CF%80
mor than 1,000
Lu Chao
The current record is 1241100000000 decimals, set by Kanada and team in 2002.
The world record (as of 21st April 2012) was set by Chao Lu of China on the 20th November 2005. He managed to memorize pi to 67,890 digits.
The world record in 1995 was 42,195 digits. It has since been improved to 67,890 digits.
rajveer meena
actually, pi is a non-terminating decimal, which means it goes on forever. but the longest i can find is 31 decimal places long. 3.1415926535897932384626433832795The current record for the decimal expression of pi is 5 trillion digits.See related link below for reference
the current record for decimal places that pi has been calculated to is 1,241,100,000,000 THIS IS MORE THAN A TRILLION * * * * * As of 17 October 2011, the answer is 10 trillion.
Normally one decimal place is appropriate.
The most numbers from Pi ever recited without mistakes was achieved on 20 November 2005 by Chao Lu (China) with 67,890 digits
In April 1999, Yasumasa Kanada and Daisuke Takahashi calculated pi to 68.7 billion places. In September 1999 they improved that to just over 206 billion.The current record (in May 2016) is 13.3 trillion.
The answer depends on the graduation on the flask.