I have oddly gotten really into Pi that I started memorizing digits of Pi. I want to see if there is any other Pi geeks out there. I know over 90 digits of Pi 3.14159265358979323846264338327950288419716939937510582097494459230781640628620899862803482534211 that's all from memory. Show me what you got.
But e^(i*pi) looks some much more elegant than e^(i*tau/2)
I don't think pi or tau is going to win here by just naming equations. To be fair they are about even on the scale of equations.
However, Tau is just that little bit easier to learn. It just gets rid of how students get confused when pi is half way around a circle and 2pi is all the way around.
Even then, I'm sure you can just use both if the need be.
No it's not. Pi is pronounced Pie (Pie, a dish baked in pastry-lined pan often with a pastry top... Oh noes!! This is math, not English), while Phi is pronounced Fy. Pi sounds better, and tastes better, as the case may be.
No it's not. Pi is pronounced Pie (Pie, a dish baked in pastry-lined pan often with a pastry top... Oh noes!! This is math, not English), while Phi is pronounced Fy. Pi sounds better, and tastes better, as the case may be.
...what? I'm sorry..are you trying to say pi is better because it sounds like pie?