The question is a bit peculiar. Pi is a single number. In and of itself, it has
no "total sum" that's different from itself, any more than ' 2 ' or ' 37 ' has.
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1 + pi, 1 - pi. Their sum is 2.
4
No, for example if A = Pi/3. Then sin3A = sin pi = 0, but sinA = sin Pi/3 = 1/2. So for A = Pi/3, the sum is 1/2, not zero. It can't be proved because the statement is false. For example if A = Pi/3. Then sin3A = sin pi = 0, but sinA = sin Pi/3 = 1/2. So for A = Pi/3, the sum is 1/2, not zero.
the circumference ... 2 pi r
Pi to 144 decimal places is written thus: 3.14159265358979323846264338327950288419716939937510 58209749445923078164062862089986280348253421170679 82148086513282306647093844609550582231725359 The sum of these first 144 decimal digits (after the decimal point) is 666.