Piphilology comprises the creation and use of mnemonic techniques to remember a span of digits of the mathematical constant Ï. The word is a play on the word "pi" itself and of the linguistic field of philology.
There are many ways to memorize Ï, including the use of piems (a portmanteau, formed by combining pi and poem), which are poems that represent Ï in a way such that the length of each word (in letters) represents a digit. Here is an example of a piem: "Now I need a drink, alcoholic of course, after the heavy lectures involving quantum mechanics." Notice how the first word has three letters, the second word has one, the third has four, the fourth has one, the fifth has five, and so on. In longer examples, 10-letter words are used to represent the digit zero, and this rule is extended to handle repeated digits in so-called Pilish writing. The short story "Cadaeic Cadenza" records the first 3834 digits of Ï in this manner, and a 10,000-word novel, Not A Wake, has been written accordingly.
However, piems prove to be inefficient for large memorizations of Ï. Other methods include remembering patterns in the numbers (for instance, the year 1971 appears in the first fifty digits of Ï) and the method of loci (which has been used to memorize Ï to 67,890 digits).
History
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Until the 20th century, the number of digits of pi which mathematicians had the stamina to calculate by hand remained in the hundreds, so that memorization of all known digits at the time was possible. In 1949 a computer was used to calculate Ï to 2000 places, presenting one of the earliest opportunities for a more difficult challenge.
Later computers calculated pi to extraordinary numbers of digits (2.7 trillion as of August 2010), and people began memorizing more and more of the output. The world record for the number of digits memorized has exploded since the mid-1990s, and it stood at 100,000 as of October 2006. The previous record (83,431) was set by the same person (Akira Haraguchi) on July 2, 2005, and the record previous to that (42,195) was held by Hiroyuki Goto. An institution from Germany provides the details of the "Pi World Ranking".
Examples in English
The most common mnemonic technique is to memorize a so-called "piem" (a wordplay on "pi" and "poem") in which the number of letters in each word is equal to the corresponding digit of Ï. This famous example for 15 digits has several variations, including:
- How I need a drink, alcoholic in nature, after the tough chapters involving quantum mechanics!
Short mnemonics such as these, of course, do not take one very far down Ï's infinite road. Instead, they are intended more as amusing doggerel. If even less accuracy suffices, the following examples can be used:
- How I wish I could recollect pi easily today!
- May I have a large container of coffee, cream and sugar?
This second one gives the value of Ï as 3.1415926535, while the first only brings it to the second five. Indeed, many published poems use truncation instead of one of the several roundings, thereby producing a less-accurate result when the first omitted digit is greater than or equal to five. It is advantageous to use truncation in memorizing if the individual intends to study more places later on, otherwise one will be remembering erroneous digits.
Another mnemonic is:
- The point I said a blind Bulgarian in France would know
In this mnemonic the word "point" represents the decimal point itself.
Yet another example is:
- How I wish I could recollect, of circle round, the exact relation Arkimedes (or Archimede) learned
In this example, the spelling of Archimedes is normalised to nine. (Although 'Archimedes' is, today, a more correct spelling of the ancient Greek mathematician's name in English, Archimede is also often seen when this mnemonic is given, since Archimède is the more correct spelling in some languages, such as French.)
Longer mnemonics employ the same concept. This example created by Peter M. Brigham incorporates twenty decimal digits:
- How I wish I could enumerate pi easily, since all these bullshit mnemonics prevent recalling any of pi's sequence more simply.
Poems
In the children's book, 'Somewhen' (David Saul and Danielle Mathieson, ISBNÂ 9780473218584), a poem is presented as a riddle. Here, the words describe the ratio and as laid out, the riddle forms a circle. To side-step the zero at decimal position 32, the word 'nothing' is used.
- It's a fact
- A ratio immutable
- Of circle round and width
- Produces geometry's deepest conundrum.
- For as the numerals stay random
- No repeat lets out its presence.
- Yet it forever stretches forth.
- Nothing to eternity.
- For as the numerals stay random
Some mnemonics, such as this poem which gives the three and the first 20 decimal digits, use the separation of the poem's title and main body to represent the decimal point:
- Pie
- I wish I could determine pi
- Eureka, cried the great inventor
- Christmas pudding, Christmas pie
- Is the problem's very center.
Another, more poetic version is:
- Sir, I have a rhyme excelling,
- In mystic power and magic spelling,
- Celestial spirits elucidate,
- For my own problems can't relate.
Extensions to 30 or 31 decimals of the same proceed as follows:
There are minor variations on the above rhyme, which still allow pi to be worked out correctly. However, one variation replaces the word "lexicon's" with "lesson's" and in doing so, incorrectly indicates that the 18th digit is seven.
The logologist Dmitri Borgmann gives the following 30-word poem in his book, Language on Vacation: An Olio of Orthographical Oddities:
- Now, a moon, a lover refulgent in flight,
- Sails the black silence's loneliest ellipse.
- Computers use pi, the constant, when polite,
- Or gentle data for sad tracking aid at eclipse.
The following sonnet is a mnemonic for pi to 75 decimal places in iambic pentameter:
- Now I defy a tenet gallantly
- Of circle canon law: these integers
- Importing circles' quotients are, we see,
- Unwieldy long series of cockle burs
- Put all together, get no clarity;
- Mnemonics shan't describeth so reformed
- Creating, with a grammercy plainly,
- A sonnet liberated yet conformed.
- Strangely, the queer'st rules I manipulate
- Being followéd, do facilitate
- Whimsical musings from geometric bard.
- This poesy, unabashed as it's distressed,
- Evolvéd coherent - a simple test,
- Discov'ring poetry no numerals jarred.
Note that in this example, 10-letter words are used to represent the digit zero.
Other poems use sound as a mnemonic technique, as in the following poem which rhymes with the first 140 decimal places of pi using a blend of assonance, slant rhyme, and perfect rhyme:
- dreams number us like pi. runes shift. nights rewind
- daytime pleasure-piles. dream-looms create our id.
- moods shift. words deviate. needs brew. pleasures rise.
- time slows. too late? wait! foreign minds live in
- us! quick-minds, free-minds, minds-we-never-mind,
- unknown, gyrate! neuro-rhymes measure our
- minds, for our minds rhyme. crude ego-emanations
- distort nodes. id, (whose basic neuro-spacetime rhymes),
- plays its tune. space drones before fate unites
- dreamsâ lore to unsung measures. whole dimensions
- gyrate. new number-games donate quick minds &
- weave through fateâs loom. fears, hopes, digits, or devils
- collide hereâ"labor stored in gold-mines, lives, lightcone-
- piles. fate loops through dreams & pleasure-loomsâ¦.
Note that "dreams number us like pi" corresponds to "314159," and so on. Sound-based mnemonic techniques, unlike pilish, do not require that the letters in each word be counted in order to recall the digits of pi. However, where sound-based mnemonics use assonance, extra care must be taken to distinguish "nine" and "five," which contain the same vowel sound. In this example, the author assumes the convention that zero is often called "O."
Piku
The piku follows the rules of conventional haiku (three lines of 5, 7 and 5 syllables), but with the added mnemonic trick that each word contains the same number of letters as the numerals of pi, e.g.
- How I love a verse
- Contrived to unhusk dryly
- One image nutshell
Songs
In 2004, Andrew Huang wrote a song that was a mnemonic for the first fifty digits of pi, titled "I am the first 50 digits of pi". The first line is:
- Man, I canât - I shanât! - formulate an anthem where the words comprise mnemonics, dreaded mnemonics for pi.
In 2013, Huang extended the song to include the first 100 digits of pi, and changed the title to "Pi Mnemonic Song".
Lengthier works
There are piphilologists who have written texts that encode hundreds or thousands of digits. This is an example of constrained writing, known as "Pilish". For example, Poe, E.: Near a Raven represents 740 digits, Cadaeic Cadenza encodes 3835, and Not A Wake extends to 10,000 digits.
Sound-based mnemonics
It is also possible to use the rhythm and sound of the spoken digits themselves as a memorization device. The mathematician John Horton Conway composed the following arrangement for the first 100 digits,
_ _ _ 3 point 1415 9265 35 ^ ^ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ 8979 3238 4626 4338 3279 ** **^^ ^^ **** . _ _ __ _ _ _ . _ . 502 884 197 169 399 375 105 820 974 944 ^ ^ ^ ^ 59230 78164 _ _ _ _ 0628 6208 998 6280 ^^ ^^ ^^ .. _ .._ 34825 34211 70679, ^ ^
where the accents indicate various kinds of repetition.
Another mnemonic system used commonly in the memorization of pi is the Mnemonic major system, where single numbers are translated into basic sounds. A combination of these sounds creates a word, which can then be translated back into numbers. When combined with the Method of loci, this becomes a very powerful memorization tool.
Examples in other languages
Persian
- خرد ٠داÙØ´ ٠آگاÙÛ Ø¯Ø§ÙØ´Ù ÙداÙ
- .ر٠سر٠Ùز٠٠ÙصÙد ب٠ا Ø¢Ù Ùزد
Translation:
- The wisdom, science, and knowledge of scholars,
- will show us the way to destination.
Note: By counting the number of each letters in each word you are able to memorize pi to the 10th decimal place. ex: خرد (kherad) = 3, Ù (va) = 1, داÙØ´ (daanesh) = 4, Ù (va) = 1, آگاÙÛ (aagaahi) = 5, ...
Hungarian
- Nem a régi s durva közelÃtés,
- Mi szótól szóig Ãgy kijön
- Betűiket számlálva.
- Ludolph eredménye már,
- Ha itt végezzük húsz jegyen.
- De rendre kijÅ' még tÃz pontosan,
- Azt is bÃzvást Ãgérhetem.
Translation:
- It is not the old and rough approximation,
- What comes out word by word
- Counting their letters.
- Ludolph's result is already here,
- If we do it, on twenty digits.
- But come out ten more precisely
- I also promise definitely.
An interesting (not math themed) alternative:
- BÃr-e, érez-e ember nyugalmat,
- Ha lelkét nehéz bús emlék zaklatja.
- Szüntelen felhÅ'be burkolózó idÅ' az,
- Ami változni ámha akarna se tudhat,
- Mert azt nem Ãrhattya már le halandó kÃvánsága.
Translation:
- Whether has, whether feels a man a peace of mind
- If his soul is harassed by heavy, sad memories.
- The continuously clouded time is,
- What cannot change although it want,
- Because it cannot be written by a mortal's desire.
Another alternative:
- Ãme a szám: a görög periféria pi betűje.
- Euler meg Viète végtelen összeggel közelÃt értékéhez.
- Lám, Å't már Egyiptom, KÃna, Európa is akarta, hogy
- âama kör kerülete úgy ki lehetne számlálvaâ.
Albanian
- Kur i hyej, e kryej, sigurisht, po përtoj andaj nuk fitoj â" "If I start dealing with it, I will do it, but I am lazy therefore I do not win."
German
This statement yields Ï to twenty-two decimal places:
- Wie, o dies Ï macht ernstlich so vielen viele Müh. Lernt immerhin, Mägdelein, leichte Verselein, wie so zum Beispiel dies dürfte zu merken sein.
English translation that doesn't encode pi:
- How, oh this Ï seriously makes so many struggles to so many. Learn at least, girls, simple little verses, just such as this one should be memorizable.
Looser English translation that encodes pi:
- Woe! O this Ï makes seriously so muchly many's woe.
French
The following poem composed of alexandrines consists of words each with a number of letters that yields Ï to 126 decimal places:
- Que jâaime à faire apprendre un nombre utile aux sages !
- Immortel Archimède, artiste ingénieur,
- Qui de ton jugement peut priser la valeur ?
- Pour moi, ton problème eut de pareils avantages.
- Jadis, mystérieux, un problème bloquait
- Tout lâadmirable procédé, lâÅ"uvre grandiose
- Que Pythagore découvrit aux anciens Grecs.
- Ã" quadrature ! vieux tourment du philosophe !
- Insoluble rondeur, trop longtemps vous avez
- Défié Pythagore et ses imitateurs.
- Comment intégrer lâespace plan circulaire ?
- Former un triangle auquel il équivaudra ?
- Nouvelle invention : Archimède inscrira
- Dedans un hexagone ; appréciera son aire,
- Fonction du rayon. Pas trop ne sây tiendra :
- Dédoublera chaque élément antérieur ;
- Toujours de lâorbe calculée approchera ;
- Définira limite ; enfin, lâarc, le limiteur
- De cet inquiétant cercle, ennemi trop rebelle !
- Professeur, enseignez son problème avec zèle !
Translation:
- How I like to teach this number useful to the wise.
- Immortal Archimedes, artist, engineer,
- in your opinion who could estimate its value?
- For me, your problem had equal advantages.
- Long ago, mysterious, a problem blocked
- All the honorable process, the great work
- That Pythagoras revealed to the Ancient Greeks.
- Oh quadrature! Old philosopher's torment
- Unsolvable roundness, for too long you have
- Defied Pythagoras and his imitators.
- How to integrate the plain circular space?
- Form a triangle to which it is equivalent?
- New invention: Archimedes will inscribe
- Inside a hexagon; will appreciate its area
- Function of a ray. Not too much to hold onto there:
- Will split each previous element;
- Always the calculated orb will approach
- Will define the limit; finally, the arc, the limiter
- Of this disturbing circle, an enemy too rebellious
- Teacher, teach its problem with zeal
An alternative beginning:
- Que jâaime à faire apprendre un nombre utile aux sages !
- Glorieux Archimède, artiste ingénieur,
- Toi de qui Syracuse aime encore la gloire,
- Soit ton nom conservé par de savants grimoires !
- ...
Katharevousa (archaizing) Greek
Yielding Ï to 22 decimal places:
- á¼Îµá½¶ á½ ÎÎµá½¸Ï á½ ÎÎÎ³Î±Ï Î³ÎµÏμεÏÏεá¿,
- Ïὸ κÏÎºÎ»Î¿Ï Î¼á¿ÎºÎ¿Ï ἵνα á½ÏίÏῠδιαμÎÏÏῳ,
- ÏαÏήγαγεν á¼Ïιθμὸν á¼ÏÎÏανÏον,
- καὶ ὠν, Ïεῦ, οá½Î´ÎÏοÏε ὠλον θνηÏοὶ θὰ εá½ÏÏÏι
Translation:
- The Great God applies geometry forever;
- To define the length of the circle using its diameter,
- He produced an infinite number,
- Which, alas, mortals will never find in its entirety.
Spanish
The following piem, giving Ï to 31 decimal places, is well known in Argentina:
- Fue y cayó. Y queda solamente la inútil cifra con pocos destinos poderosos, tristes devenires sin el más sencillo bien. Idiota, re idiota, sabe que sus encantos son ya latosos decimales. Pobre...
Translation:
- It went and it fell. And only the useless figure remains, with little powerful destinies, sad future without the simplest goodness. Idiotic, very idiotic, it knows that its charms are now boring decimals. Poor...
Another. This piem gives Ï (correctly rounded) to 10 decimal places. (If you prefer to not round Ï, then replace "cosmos" with "cielo".)
- Sol y luna y mundo proclaman al eterno Autor del Cosmos.
Translation:
- Sun and moon and world proclaim the eternal Author of the Cosmos. (Or "heaven", not Cosmos, if using "cielo".)
Irish
NÃl i mata, a shaoi, eolaÃocht nó feidhm. (7 decimal places) â" "Wise one, mathematics has neither science nor use."
Romanian
One of the Romanian versions of Pi poems is:
- Dar o Ètim, e numÄr important ce trebuie iubit
- But we know, it's an important number which should be loved
- Din toate numerele însemnate diamant neasemuit,
- Of all the significant numbers it is a peerless diamond
- Cei ce vor temeinic asta preÈui
- Those who will sincerely appreciate it
- Ei veÈnic bine vor trÄi.
- Will live happy for ever.
There is another phrase known in Romanian that will help to memorize the number by eight decimal places: AÈa e bine a scrie renumitul Èi utilul numÄr. â" "This is the way to write the renowned and useful number."
Russian
In the Russian language, there is a well-known phrase in the reform of 1917 orthography of old tradition: "ÐÑо и ÑÑÑÑ, и ÑкоÑо пожелаеÑÑ Â«Ðи» ÑзнаÑÑ ÑиÑло â" ÑÐ¶Ñ Ð·Ð½Ð°ÐµÑÑ." (The one who would wish to know the number pi easily and quickly already knows it.)
A more modern rhyme is:
- ÐÑо Ñ Ð·Ð½Ð°Ñ Ð¸ Ð¿Ð¾Ð¼Ð½Ñ Ð¿ÑекÑаÑно,
- I know the following and remember it perfectly,
- Ðи многие знаки мне лиÑни, напÑаÑнÑ.
- Multitudes of the digits of pi are unnecessary and idle for me.
A short approximation is: "ЧÑо Ñ Ð·Ð½Ð°Ñ Ð¾ кÑÑÐ³Ð°Ñ ?" (What do I know about circles?)
In addition, there are several nonfolklore verses that simply rhyme the digits of pi "as is"; for examples, see the Russian version of this article.
Polish
The verse of Polish mathematician Witold RybczyÅski:
- Daj, o pani, o boska Mnemozyno, pi liczbÄ, którÄ też zowiÄ ponÄtnie ludolfinÄ , pamiÄci przekazaÄ tak, by jej dowolnie oraz szybko do pomocy użyÄ, gdy siÄ problemu nie da inaczej rozwiÄ zaÄ, pauza â" to zastÄ piÄ liczbami. (35 decimal places) - "Allow, o lady, o divine Mnemosyne, the pi number, which also is called enticingly the ludolphine, to pass to memory, so as to use it freely and quickly for help, when the problem can not be otherwise resolved, pause â" this replace by the numbers." (Note that the dash stands for zero.)
The verse of Polish mathematician Kazimierz CwojdziÅski:
- KuÄ i oraÄ w dzieÅ zawziÄcie, bo plonów niema bez trudu. ZÅocisty szczÄÅcia okrÄcie koÅyszesz ⦠KuÄ. My nie czekajmy cudu. Robota to potÄga ludu. (23 decimal places) - "Hammer and plow by day obstinately, because there are no fruits without effort. Golden ship of happiness, rocking... Hammer. Let us not wait for a miracle. Labor is the power of the people."
- ByÅ i jest i wieki sÅawionym ów bÄdzie, który kóŠobwód ÅrednicÄ wymierzyÅ. (12 decimal places) â" "There was, and there is, and through centuries renowned will be, who circle's circumference measured with its diameter."
- Kto z woli i myÅli zapragnie Pi spisaÄ cyfry, ten zdoÅa (10 decimal places) - "Who out of will and mind shall wish to write the digits of Pi, shall succeed."
An occasionally seen verse related to Mundial Argentina and the Polish football team:
- Już i Lato i Deyna / strzelili do bramki obcej / dwa karne / LubaÅski dostrzegÅ mistrza Szarmacha / gdy on tak wypuÅciÅ cios szacha / że zdobyÄ musi cel gry / krzyknÄ Å Gol na Mundial Argentyna. (30 decimal places) - "Already both Lato and Deyna have scored two penalty kicks to the opponent's goal. LubaÅski noticed the champion Szarmach, when he had so released a Shah's strike that he's got to attain the objective of the game; he shouted 'Goal' at the World Cup Argentina.
Portuguese
- Cai a neve e novas ferrovias de marfim serão por casas trocadas. (11 decimal places) â" "The snow falls and new ivory railroads will be exchanged by houses."
- Com o zero o lente reprovará os alunos. (8 decimal places) â" "With zero the university professor will fail the students."
Or in Brazilian Portuguese:
- Sim, é útil e fácil memorizar um número grato aos sábios. â" "Yes, it's useful and easy to memorize a number dear to the wisemen."
- Nós e todo o mundo guardamos pi usando letra por número. â" "We and all the world memorize pi using letter for number."
- Sou o medo e temor constante do menino vadio. â" "I'm the constant fear and dread of the stray boy."
A piem written in a more poetic manner:
- Sou o amor,
- o homem impetuoso da libido
- Homem que ataca mulheres atraentes,
- meninas pecadoras que no céu imiscuem amor, paixão, fé, desejo, tudo!
- Até que idolatro com as sereias pecadoras tanta fé!
- Esbeltas mulheres para o musculado,
- sereias e fêmeas pecadoras
- Até idolatram serpentes com ardente macho.
- O viril desejará as pecadoras inÃquas doravante para amar.
Translation:
- I am the love,
- The impetuous man from the libido
- Man who attacks attractive women,
- sinful maidens who on heaven intrude love, passion, faith, desire, everything!
- I even idolize with the mermaids so much faith!
- Luscious women for the brawny,
- sinful mermaids and females
- They even idolize serpents with the burning buck.
- The virile man will wish the sinful and the iniquitous henceforth to love.
Japanese
Japanese piphilology has countless mnemonics based on punning words with numbers. This is especially easy in Japanese because there are two or three ways to pronounce each digit, and the language has relatively few phonemes to begin with. For example, to 31 decimal places:
This is close to being ungrammatical nonsense, but a loose translation prioritizing word order yields:
- A person is one; the world is one:
- to live this way, it's meaningless, one says, and cries,
- "step on it, will ya!" then readsâ"be the same!
- Crying uncontrollably in the dark.
Japanese children also use songs built on this principle to memorize the multiplication table.
Chinese
It is possible to construct piphilogical poems in Chinese by using homophones or near-homophones of the numbers zero through nine, as in the following well known example which covers 22 decimal places of Ï. In this example the character meaning "mountain" (å±± shÄn) is used to represent the number "three" (ä¸ sÄn), the character meaning "I" (å¾ wú) is used to represent the number "five" (äº" wÇ"), and the characters meaning "temple" (寺 sì) and "die" (æ» sÇ) are used to represent the number "four" (å sì). Some of the mnemonic characters used in this poem, for example "kill" (殺 shÄ) for "three" (ä¸ sÄn), "jug" (壺 hú) for "five" (äº" wÇ"), "happiness" (æ¨ lè) for "six" (å liù) and "eat" (å chÄ«) for "seven" (ä¸ qÄ«), are not very close phonetically in Mandarin/Putonghua.
This can be translated as:
- On a mountain top a temple and a jug of wine.
- Your happiness makes me so bitter;
- Take some wine and drink, the wine will kill you;
- If it does not kill you, I will rejoice in your happiness.
Turkish
Sen, o alan o çevre bölününce ve sonsuz rakam ile çıkan deÄiÅken dizilimli sayısın. â" "You are the number with infinite digits in changing order, which is found when the circumference and the area is divided."
Czech
Sám u sebe v hlavÄ magického pà ÄÃslic deset mám. (nine decimal places) â" "I have ten digits of magical pi in my head."
LÃn a kapr u hráze prohlÃdli si rybáÅe, udici mÄl novou, jikrnáÄi neuplovou. (12 decimal places) â" "Tench and carp by the dam watched the fisher. He has a new rod, fish will not escape."
Dej, ó Bože, a ÄÃslo Ludolfovo já navždy pomnu, pro vÄtÅ¡Ã naplnÄnà moudrosti poÄetnÃ. (13 decimal places) â" "Oh God, let me to remember the pi forever, for the increase of mathematical skills."
Mám ó bože ó velký pamatovat si takový cifer Åad, velký slovutný Archimedes, pomáhej trápenému, dej mu moc, nazpamÄÅ¥ nechÅ¥ odÅÃká ty slavné sice, ale tak protivné nám, ach, ÄÃslice Ludolfovy! (30 decimal places) â" "Shall I, God oh almighty, remember such a long string of numbers, great and famous Archimedes, help my careworn being, give me the power, to recite by heart all the digits, which may be famous, but also hated by some of us, the digits of Ludolph van Ceulen."
Serbian
Äak i Grci i stari Vavilonci su kazali: obime kad deliÅ¡ krugovim preÄnikom dobijaÅ¡ neophodan nam pi. (16 decimal places) â" "Even Greeks and Old Babylonians have told: when dividing circumferences with circle's diameter you obtain the indispensable pi."
Italian
Non è dato a tutti ricordare il numero aureo del sommo filosofo Archimede. Certuni sostengon che si può ricordar tale numero, ma questi soli poi non recitano che un centone insensato. (30 decimal places) â" "Not anybody can retain the golden number of the great philosopher Archimedes. There are who claim it is possible to recall this number, but then they just recite a senseless cento"
Sanskrit
The Katapayadi System of verses is basically a system of code so that things can be defined in a way so that people can remember. The code is as follows:
With the above key in place, Sri Bharathi Krishna Tirtha in his Vedic Mathematics gives the following verse:
à¤à¥à¤ªà¥ à¤à¤¾à¤à¥à¤¯ मधà¥à¤µà¥à¤°à¤¾à¤¤ शà¥à¤°à¥à¤à¥à¤à¤¿à¤¶à¥ दधिसनà¥à¤§à¤¿à¤ | à¤à¤²à¤à¥à¤µà¤¿à¤¤ à¤à¤¾à¤¤à¤¾à¤µ à¤à¤²à¤¹à¤¾à¤²à¤¾à¤°à¤¸à¤à¤§à¤¾à¤° | If we replace the code from the above table in the above verse, here is what we get. 31 41 5926 535 89793 23846 264 33832792 That gives us Ï/10=0.31415926535897932384626433832792
Memorization record holders
Even before computers calculated Ï, memorizing a record number of digits became an obsession for some people. The record for memorizing digits of Ï, certified by Guinness World Records, is 70,000 digits, recited in India by Rajveer Meena in 9 hours and 27 minutes on 21 March 2015. On October 3, 2006, Akira Haraguchi, a retired Japanese engineer, claimed to have recited 100,000 decimal places, but the claim was not verified by Guinness World Records.
David Fiore was an early record holder for pi memorization. Fiore's record stood as an American record for more than 27 years, which remains the longest time period for an American recordholder. He was the first person to break the 10,000 digit mark.
Suresh Kumar Sharma holds Limca Book of Records for the most decimal places of pi recited by memory. He rattled off 70,030 numbers in 17 hours 14 minutes on October 21, 2015.
See also
- Mnemonist
- Cadaeic Cadenza
- Memory sport
Notes and references
External links
- Pi World Ranking List
- Tools for Piphilologist
- Collection of Mnemonic Devices
- Mathworld Pi Wordplay
- Hatzipolakis Pi Philology v. 9.5