Happy Pi Day! - Printable Version +- HP Forums (https://www.hpmuseum.org/forum) +-- Forum: HP Calculators (and very old HP Computers) (/forum-3.html) +--- Forum: General Forum (/forum-4.html) +--- Thread: Happy Pi Day! (/thread-7939.html) Pages: 1 2 |
RE: Happy Pi Day! - Gerson W. Barbosa - 03-18-2017 09:17 PM (03-18-2017 03:43 AM)Joe Horn Wrote: That's 433 digits (217 digits over 216 digits) that returns 435 digits of pi. Converting the above into a mnemonic is left as an exercise for the student. Speaking of mnemonics, I think I've found a good one for 20. Just in case I forget about the number :-) \({e}^{\pi }-\pi +\frac{81}{89998-{10}^{5}\cdot \left ( {\frac{81}{89998}} \right )^{2}}\) RE: Happy Pi Day! - pier4r - 03-28-2017 10:30 AM (03-14-2017 01:14 AM)Gerson W. Barbosa Wrote: -cut- How does one split a number to let it be multiline on the 50g? Is there a built in function or a third party function or one needs to take the number as string and then break it down with a little userRPL program? (the solution of Gerson I suppose, looking at the code) RE: Happy Pi Day! - Joe Horn - 03-28-2017 11:59 AM (03-28-2017 10:30 AM)pier4r Wrote: How does one split a number to let it be multiline on the 50g? Is there a built in function or a third party function or one needs to take the number as string and then break it down with a little userRPL program? One very fast solution is the "LNViewer" library by Christophe Laluc, which you can read about and download HERE. I use it for viewing long integers and outputs from the LongFloat library. Be sure to read LNViewer's documentation, because how to use it is non-obvious. RE: Happy Pi Day! - pier4r - 03-28-2017 09:23 PM (03-28-2017 11:59 AM)Joe Horn Wrote:(03-28-2017 10:30 AM)pier4r Wrote: How does one split a number to let it be multiline on the 50g? Is there a built in function or a third party function or one needs to take the number as string and then break it down with a little userRPL program? It is a neat solution. Thanks! |