03-12-2015, 04:19 AM
(03-11-2015 01:36 AM)Dave Frederickson Wrote: [ -> ](03-10-2015 08:23 PM)Gerson W. Barbosa Wrote: [ -> ]In case he doesn't like that simple expression, I would suggest him a slightly more complicated one:
\[326\pi-\frac{1}{2}\left ( \frac{1}{\pi }+\frac{5}{\left \{\sqrt{5}\left [90+\pi ^{2}+\frac{1}{25\left ( 10+\frac{\pi }{2} \right )} \right ] \right \}^{2}}\right )\]
To be evaluated on the WP 34S (DBLOFF)
What did you guys do! 1024 is a nice, simple, power of 2. 10000000000b. You had to go and throw pi into it, no pun intended. What's pi in binary, anyway?? Oh well, it's Gerald's member number so I guess it's up to him.
Near-integers are cool, especially if they're more compact than the number of repeated 0s or 9s in the result (not the case here).
Who's #3, BTW? I've found a beautiful one for 3 (beauty lies in eye of the beholder), involving the digits 1 through 4, (Not single digits, one even repeats itself ad infinitum. 3 appears only once, in the result, of course), two instances of e and an inverse trigonometric function.