Not necessarily. i times pi is not a whole number, and yet e to the power of i times pi is equal to -1.
If you mean pi then: 50 times pi is about 157 to the nearest whole number
-- Multiply (pi) by (diameter of circle)OR-- Multiply (pi) by (2 times radius of circle)-- Then round the product to the nearest whole number.
no
No, not the whole number because it goes on forever. The shortened version of pi is 3.14.
Not necessarily. i times pi is not a whole number, and yet e to the power of i times pi is equal to -1.
If you mean pi then: 50 times pi is about 157 to the nearest whole number
No because the circumference of a circle is pi times diameter and pi is an irrational number
A decimal, in this context, is a useless description: a decimal can be an integer, a rational number or an irrational number. Furthermore, a whole number times a decimal fraction can be a whole number, a rational number or an irrational number.For example:4 * 3.5 = 14 is a whole number times a decimal fraction = whole number.4 * 3.3 = 13.2 is a whole number times a decimal fraction = rational fraction.4 * 3.14159... [ie pi in decimal form] = 4 * pi, which is an irrational number.
-- Multiply (pi) by (diameter of circle)OR-- Multiply (pi) by (2 times radius of circle)-- Then round the product to the nearest whole number.
The number pi, approximated by 3.1416 is closest to the whole number 3.
Pi rounded to the nearest whole number is 3.
no
No, not the whole number because it goes on forever. The shortened version of pi is 3.14.
Pi to the nearest whole number is 3.
No, it is an irrational number.
Nope - Pi is an infinite number. The fractional equivalent is 22/7 which can never be a whole number.