It is an irrational number; therefore the sequence is endless. The 'full number sequence' can never be known.
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Those are the first six digits of pi. Pi ~= 3.141592653... etc
Since 2 pi radians equals a full circle; the answer is pi / 2 pi being about 3.14159
this sequence appears in pi around 1000 digits into it
Yes, the sequence "123456789" appears in the decimal expansion of pi. However, it is important to note that pi is an irrational number with an infinite and non-repeating decimal expansion, so it is expected that any finite sequence of numbers will eventually appear. The exact location of "123456789" in the digits of pi is not known due to the random and non-repeating nature of pi's decimal expansion.
The term pi refers to the ratio of a circle's diameter to its circumference. The actual value is a transcendental number, that is, a number whose decimal value "keeps going to infinity" and does not repeat. As such, pi has no "full form" unless we choose to just write the symbol, which means "exactly the number" which is the ratio of a circle's diameter to its circumference. That's as "full" as we can make it. In other words, pi does have an exact value, but that value can not be expressed numerically.