There are too many digits, but I'll give you the ones I've memorized:
3.141592653589793238462643383279502884197169399375105820974944...
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To the above answer: That's not what the question is asking.
Answer:
Digits of pi used to be calculated by dividing the circumference by the diameter of a circle. The same answer will come out for all circles.
Now, we have machines that can crunch up millions of digits in a relatively short amount of time.
Because Pi is known to be an irrational number it means that the digits never end or repeat in any known way. But calculating the digits of Pi has proven to be an fascination for mathematicians throughout history. Some spent their lives calculating the digits of Pi, but until computers, less than 1,000 digits had been calculated. In 1949, a computer calculated 2,000 digits and the race was on. Millions of digits have been calculated, with the record held (as of September 1999) by a supercomputer at the University of Tokyo that calculated 206,158,430,000 digits. (first 1,000 digits). However, learning 3.141, is all that is necessary. But you can go on and on, to infinity, and never find the exact circumference of a circle. I have only memorized 205 digits of pi; and yes I do use it to find the circumference of a circle.
K
the current record for decimal places that pi has been calculated to is 1,241,100,000,000 THIS IS MORE THAN A TRILLION * * * * * As of 17 October 2011, the answer is 10 trillion.
Pi is infinite. The current number of digits calculated is over ten-trillion. If you want to find a pretty good estimate, divide 22 by 7.
Archimedes a greek mathematician this may be wrong so if it is its not my fault
Alexander J. Yee and Shigeru Kondo have calculated 10 trillion digits of Pi.
Pi was calculated to 10 trillion digits on October 17, 2011.
1706
too many
Desktop Gizmodo
Isaac Newton got up to 16 digits of pi when using his method or he calculated 3.1415926535897932
pi has not yet been calculated to that degree of precision.
actually pi is endless ,so no one has calculated the last digits yet , interestinly it isn't repeating either.. they have whole books on it, filled with the digits of pi.
1706
Because Pi is known to be an irrational number it means that the digits never end or repeat in any known way. But calculating the digits of Pi has proven to be an fascination for mathematicians throughout history. Some spent their lives calculating the digits of Pi, but until computers, less than 1,000 digits had been calculated. In 1949, a computer calculated 2,000 digits and the race was on. Millions of digits have been calculated, with the record held (as of September 1999) by a supercomputer at the University of Tokyo that calculated 206,158,430,000 digits. (first 1,000 digits). However, learning 3.141, is all that is necessary. But you can go on and on, to infinity, and never find the exact circumference of a circle. I have only memorized 205 digits of pi; and yes I do use it to find the circumference of a circle.
You can get up to 100 million digits here:http://pi.is.online.fr/
Currently (Sept 2014), the number of digits is 10 trillion (and fifty).