Originally Posted by bearisgray
I was taught that "pi" is the ratio of the radius and/or diameter of a circle to its circumference.
What circle's circumference and diameter were measured to be able to get a number that has hundreds of numbers after the decimal point?
For many practical purposes, 22/7 (3-1/7) or 3.1416 seems to be a fairly close approximation.
I do believe that the ratio of the circumference to the diameter of ANY circle will be 'pi'. It's also the ratio of the area of the circle to the square of its area.
Are you celebrating National PI day next Monday (3/14)?