The ancient people who had the most inaccurate value of (pi) were the
Schwarma tribe of the southern Urals.
They used the value [ Pi = 62 ]. That, combined with the mountainous territory that
they inhabited, made land survey totally impossible. Great wars broke out among their
farmers, their people starved, and the Schwarma faded out of existence, remembered
today only for their cuisine.
In ancient times the value of Pi was given as 3 but even today the exact value of Pi is not known because it is an irrational number.
In ancient times the value of Pi was given as 3 but even today the exact value of Pi is not known because it is an irrational number.
The value of pi (Ï€) is3.1415926535897932384626433832795028841971693993751.........
No one has fully discovered pi. Pi is believed to be irrational.
Not sure what the 227 is for but the value of pi is 3.14159265
The most inaccurate version of PI would have to be...
In ancient times the value of Pi was given as 3 but even today the exact value of Pi is not known because it is an irrational number.
In ancient times the value of Pi was given as 3 but even today the exact value of Pi is not known because it is an irrational number.
In ancient times the value of Pi was given as 3 but even today the exact value of Pi is not known because it is an irrational number.
Most likely never.
The area of a circle is its diameter times the value of PI. In most cases you can safely use the 3.14159 for the value of PI
The value of Pi is 3.14 so the value of Pi by 2 is 6.28.
It is not practical to work with the actual value of pi, because there is no actual value of pi. We all know that pi more or less equals 3.14159265 . . . but the number of decimal points in pi never ends. 3.14159 is extremely precise, and works for most uses.
The approximate value of pi is 3.14159265.
The value of pi (Ï€) is3.1415926535897932384626433832795028841971693993751.........
The value for Pi for math is 3.14. Pi is the 16th letter in the Greek alphabet.
You get the value of pi by dividing the circumference with the diameter of a circle. pi = c/d