<Silly blog article>
The .Net Framework includes a math library that includes a constant for PI. Just how much is PI?
The MSDN article says:
The Visual Studio debugger says:
The Visual Studio Autos and Locals windows say:
And when written from Console.WriteLine:
Or does it? Reformatted with "R" WriteLine matches the value reported from the debugger.
and for the final test:
So who is right? According to Wikipedia the first 50 digits are 3.14159265358979323846264338327950288419716939937510. Based on that number the MSDN documentation describes a more accurate number than returned by Math.PI.
From the .Net double documentation: here and here
- Double-precision numbers store an approximation of a real number.
- Holds signed IEEE 64-bit (8-byte) double-precision floating-point numbers
- A Double value has up to 15 decimal digits of precision, although a maximum of 17 digits is maintained internally
- When you work with floating-point numbers, remember that they do not always have a precise representation in memory.
- The documentation's examples only have 18 digits, so PI as a double should be apx 3.14159265358979324
In the end…
3.14159265358979323846264338327950288419716939937510 Wikipedia
3.14159265358979323846 MSDN documentation for Math.PI
3.14159265358979324 What I would guess based on the documentation for doubles
3.1415926535897931 Returned in Visual Studio debugging tools
3.1415926535897931 Returned by the ToString() conversion through WriteLine formatted with "R"
3.14159265358979 Returned by the ToString() conversion through WriteLine
and just for fun… JavaScript says:
3.141592653589793
So… for the important question… is the value of PI in the documentation for Math.PI wrong?
</Silly blog article>
Now I have to get back to some real work!
.
1 comment:
All this talk about pi is making me hungry!
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