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- Newsgroups: sci.math
- Path: sparky!uunet!seas.gwu.edu!dutcher
- From: dutcher@seas.gwu.edu (Sylvia Dutcher)
- Subject: Re: Pi and math in general
- Message-ID: <1992Dec28.020944.22217@seas.gwu.edu>
- Sender: news@seas.gwu.edu
- Organization: George Washington University
- References: <18935@mindlink.bc.ca>
- Date: Mon, 28 Dec 1992 02:09:44 GMT
- Lines: 18
-
- In article <18935@mindlink.bc.ca> Clayten_Hamacher@mindlink.bc.ca (Clayten Hamacher) writes:
- >Can someone post some information on how to calculate Pi please. (preferably
- >something more precise than 22/7)
- >
- Try "A History of Pi" by Peter Beckman, ISBN 0-312-38185-9,
- St. Martin's Press, N.Y. (List price $8.95). This book contains
- lots of different methods. It omits my personal favorite, a continued
- fraction method worked up by Bill Gosper at M.I.T. years ago...
- In all methods, the way is to note that something converges to pi or one
- of its multiples. Some series, for example, or the number of marbles
- dropped into a big circle. Then calculate that.
-
- >Also, can someone who teaches (or has just gone through some beginning
- >(university level) math courses recomend some reading for me. I would like to
- >progress a little faster than my school as they are still reviewing
- For calculus, Buck's Calculus is great for quick students. For
- younger folk, "A History of Mathematics" by Neuman is a great series
- of reads (although somewhat dated in some areas)..
-