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this post was submitted on 12 Mar 2024
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Asklemmy
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As a computer scientist, same, but it's called
PI
.It's the computer that does the thing with the digits, not me. ๐
In which case you're probably using a predefined 64-bit floating point number, which I think is accurate to 15 digits.
Well, you know what's funny, after writing the comment above, I double-checked what the ฯ constant is called in Rust, as that's what I'm mostly coding with these days.
And well, it actually makes you choose. There's
f32::consts::PI
andf64::consts::PI
. Which I guess, makes sense. If you're calculating with 32-bit floats, you should be aware that ฯ is going to be less precise.So, yeah, I'm a hoax, computer scientists do need to decide between 32-bit and 64-bit.
In fact, the one time I needed ฯ in Rust, was as a 32-bit float. I built a tiny gravity simulation in a game engine and game engines generally use 32-bit floats...
Iโd like to agree, but writing ฯ with capital letters is heresy.
Yeah, math conventions and programming conventions don't always align. As in, basically never...