You eat it and i like chez
the number is that you use for pi is 3.14 the number is that you use for pi is 3.14
pi did not use any professions! It was merely a number.
Pi is the number you have to use to solve many circle equations. If you want to find the area of a circle, use radius squared times pi. For the circumference, use diameter times pi.
Divide any number by pi (which gives its result in units of pi) or use rad, which converts standard measures into angles of pi.
Pi is a number that is never ending, but most people only use the first couple of digits. pi = 3.14159265 pi is the ratio of a circles' diameter to its circumference
the number is that you use for pi is 3.14 the number is that you use for pi is 3.14
Because pi is an irrational number that has an infinite amount of digits
Pi is an irrational number, and is the circumference of the unit circle. It's a neat number to use in all sorts of circumstances.
pi did not use any professions! It was merely a number.
Pi is the number you have to use to solve many circle equations. If you want to find the area of a circle, use radius squared times pi. For the circumference, use diameter times pi.
The ancient Babylonians used pi as a number approx 4000 years ago.
Divide any number by pi (which gives its result in units of pi) or use rad, which converts standard measures into angles of pi.
Pi is a number that is never ending, but most people only use the first couple of digits. pi = 3.14159265 pi is the ratio of a circles' diameter to its circumference
Pi is about 3.14. Sometimes it is handy to use the mixed number 3 and 1/7 instead.
Most complex calculators have pi built into it. But you can use 3.14 if you only have a four function calc.
If you mean the number pi, you can't have a "large amount of pi" or a "small amount of pi" - the number pi will always be the number pi (approximately 3.1416).
Since (pi) is an irrational number and you can never write it down exactly, you need something that's close that you can use whenever you need to use (pi). The closer approximation you use in place of (pi), the closer your answer will be to the exact truth. 22/7 is a very handy number to use where you need (pi). It's easy to handle, and if you use 22/7, then your answer is only about 0.04% wrong, which is darn good accuracy.