3.1
It's a "1."
3.14
Basically No, The number pi has a decimal fraction that goes on forever and never falls into a repeating pattern. That is characteristic of irrational numbers like pi.
It is non-terminating decimal and therefore it is an irrational number
The digit in position 271 after the decimal point is 4.
8
Pi to 33 decimal places = 3.141592653589793238462643383279502 So, the number 0 is the 33rd digit (of you count the 3 before the decimal place) But, if you count after the decimal place, then it is the number 2.
It is a 6. Enjoy!
infinite number of digits after the decimal point -- pi does not have a finite value.
pi is a transcendental number and has an infinite decimal representation. Being infinite, there is no last decimal place. Moreover, unlike 1.3 which goes into an infinitely long repeating pattern, pi does not. So there is no answer to the question.
Pi cannot be expressed exactly as any fraction (including as a fraction of powers of 10, which is what a decimal fraction is). There are an infinite number of place values in the number 'pi'.
The thirty-second digit of pi following the decimal point is a 0. If you include the 3 at the front, the thirty-second digit of pi is 5.
Pi is an irrational number
The sixteenth decimal place (to the right) of Pi is the number 2. However, Pi to only 11 places to the right of the decimal is accurate for a circle the circumference of the earth to within 1 mm. Pi to 16 places is: 3.1415926535897932
Pi to the 8th decimal place is 3.14159265.
The same as the 8th decimal place of Pi itself.