3.1415926535897932384626433 That is as far as I can memorize. 25 digits. A fact about pi:
The decimal representation of Ï truncated to 11 decimal places is good enough to estimate the circumference of any circle that fits inside the Earth with an error of less than one millimeter, and the decimal representation of Ï truncated to 39 decimal places is sufficient to estimate the circumference of any circle that fits in the observable universe with precision comparable to the radius of a hydrogen atom.
Google 1 million digits of pi and it'll pop up. Pretty cool. I know 30 something but my sister knows 74. The world record is like 86,000 something. Cool stuff.
There is one website that had 1 million digits of pi. 3.1415926535897932384626433832795028841971693993751058209749445923078 buts thats all I can memorize.
I have a wall paper that is relevant to your interests :3... ur welcome. (its relevant to the thread too >__>... and I got if off of an image board... dunno the original creator of the image. they didn't put their name on it....so I'm going public domain)
I have only memorized it up to 3.14159 Until my future multivariable calculus classes ask me to memorize it further I am perfectly happy with knowing it that far. That's about as far as someone needs to go for practical purposes.
In my opinion there is no point in trying to memorize it when there are other, more important things to memorize.
I agree, thing like math formulas, and quicker ways to solve the Rubik's cube. I just used to memorize a lot. I don't anymore. Yes, I have a life (somewhat). And I play sports, too.
solving a Rubik's cube is waaaaaay easy, you just need to memorize all of the algorithms which aren't that hard to remember once you put it into practise.
Which is why I said "quicker" ways. i can already solve the cube in around a minute; I want to learn faster ways.