I am so happy to be the first person to answer this question on here. The equation for the radius of a 360 degree circle is 360/2(Pi) and of course, once you get the radius all you have to do is double it to get the diameter. So if you take Pi: 3.14159265... and multiply it by two you get: 6.2831853... and then you take that number and divide it into 360 degrees and you get: 57.29577... degrees (The Radius) and then you multiply that by two to get the diameter which is: 114.59155915...degrees, roughly, of course. My resource: The Code by Carl Munck (which you can find on YouTube).
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Oh, dude, 150 percent of a 360-degree circle is like adding 50 percent more to it, right? So, 50 percent of 360 is 180, and if you add that to the original 360, you get 540 degrees. So, technically, 150 percent of a 360-degree circle is 540 degrees. Just imagine a circle doing a little extra stretch, you know?
360 degrees * * * * * That is a nonsensical answer. The diameter of a circle is a straight line segment, going from the circumference of the circle, through the centre, to the circumference on the other side.
Divide the arc's degree measure by 360°, then multiply by the circumference of the circle.
A 331 degree angle is a reflex angle and it nearly looks like a circle because there are 360 degrees in a circle.
If you mean the diameter of a circle with area pi, then the diameter is 2. If you mean the diameter of a circle with circumference pi, then the diameter is 2. If you mean the diameter of a circle with diameter pi, then the diameter is pi. If you mean the diameter of a circle with radius pi, then the diameter is 2pi.