It is either 5 or 7, depending on whether the first "3" is counted. The value had been computed to 10 trillion places as of 2011. The first billion digits can be seen on a text file that can take up to 10 minutes to download.
The first 10 digits are 3.1415926535 and these are sufficient for all but the most rigorous calculations. There is a text file available at the related link that has the first billion (takes at least 35 seconds to load).The field size of this page cannot accommodate even the first 200,000 digits.
The first eleven digits of pi are:3.141592653
Check out the Joy of Pi link, for the first 10000 digits.
Depends on what they are, and how many total digits.
The first 10 digits are 3.1415926535 and these are sufficient for all but the most rigorous calculations. There is a text file available at the related link that has the first billion (takes at least 35 seconds to load).The field size of this page cannot accommodate even the first 200,000 digits.
You can get billions of digits in several places, for example here: http://ja0hxv.calico.jp/pai/epivalue.html Not that it is a very useful pursuit...
It is either 5 or 7, depending on whether the first "3" is counted. The value had been computed to 10 trillion places as of 2011. The first billion digits can be seen on a text file that can take up to 10 minutes to download.
The first 10 digits are 3.1415926535 and these are sufficient for all but the most rigorous calculations. There is a text file available at the related link that has the first billion (takes at least 35 seconds to load).The field size of this page cannot accommodate even the first 200,000 digits.
1 million numbers takes 512 pages and even that's too big for this website... you would need 976743 pages to get the first five billion numbers of pi.
The first 100 digits are:3.1415926535897932384626433832795028841971693993751058209749445923078164062862089986280348253421170679There is a link below to the MIT Billion Digit text file (takes awhile to load).
The first four digits (0091) indicate the number belongs to someone in India. The next two digits (22) narrow it down to the city of Mumbai.
To help you understand it better, look at it this way: a million (1,000,000) is a thousand times a thousand (1,000 x 1,000). A billion is a million times a thousand (1,000,000 x 1,000).Also, a million has only six digits to the right of the first comma (1,000,000), while a billion has nine digits to the right of the first comma (1,000,000,000).
You only need to capitalize the word "billion" if it is the first word of the sentence...or if it is actually someone's name, or any other proper noun.
The first 10 digits are 3.1415926535 (rounds to 3.1415926536) and these are sufficient for all but the most rigorous calculations. There is a text file available at the related link that has the first billion (takes at least 35 seconds to load, but as long as 5 minutes). A character in an ASCII text file is one byte, so a trillion digits is a terabyte... no one has such a file available for download. A customized compression routine could easily get this down to a half-byte per digit, but that's still hundreds of gigabytes for a trillion digits. The field size of this page cannot accommodate even the first 200,000 digits. (There's no reason to try to find a repeating pattern, because there isn't one. Pi is an irrational number so will not repeat digits as in a fractional division. This also means it doesn't compress terribly well.) NOTE: You can calculate the circumference of the observable universe to the accuracy of the diameter of a single atom with 34 digits of pi, so you probably don't need any more. If you want them just because you're curious, there's a link in the Related Links section to the page of someone who has calculated pi to ten trillion digits. The file containing these is terabytes in size, so it's not available for download, but the program used to calculate them is so you can run it yourself if you've got a few months and a very large disk to spare.
The first eleven digits of pi are:3.141592653
3.14159265358979323846 are the first 20 digits of pi.