The Dutch astronomer, Willebrord Snellius, calculated pi to 35 decimal places in the early 17th Century.
Little Jackie paper
Pi has an infinite number of decimal places
Pi to five decimal places is 3.14159.
It is: pi*352 = 3848.451 square km to 3 decimal places
Pi is an irrational number and it is 3.14 to two decimal places
Little Jackie paper
Pi has an infinite number of decimal places
Pi to five decimal places is 3.14159.
It is: pi*352 = 3848.451 square km to 3 decimal places
Pi is approximately equal to (to 20 places after the decimal) 3.14159265358979323846.
Pi is an irrational number and it is 3.14 to two decimal places
the value of pi to the nearest 5 decimal places is 3.14159
pi = 3.142 rounded to three decimal places (the thousandths)
It is: pi = 3.14 in two decimal places
pi to 5 decimal places = 3.14159
Pi has no definite number of decimal places. It can (theoretically) be written to an infinite number of decimals.
Not exactly. To 2 decimal places, pi is 3.14 To 7 decimal places, pi is 3.1415927 To 9 decimal places, pi is 3.141592654 pi does not terminate - it can be expressed to as many decimal places as required. 3.14 is often used as an approximation when doing calculations as it's easier to work with (than 3.141592653... ).