Learn About Circles & Find Radius

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around understanding the properties of circles, specifically focusing on the relationship between circumference, diameter, and radius. The original poster presents a problem involving the circumference of a circle expressed in terms of pi, seeking to find the radius.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • The original poster attempts to solve for the radius using a given circumference and expresses confusion regarding the symbol for pi. Some participants provide clarification on the correct notation and suggest alternative methods for simplifying the calculations.

Discussion Status

Participants have engaged in a light-hearted exchange while addressing the original poster's question. Some guidance on notation has been provided, and there is a recognition of the mathematical constant pi, but no consensus on the correctness of the original poster's calculations has been reached.

Contextual Notes

There is mention of the original poster's uncertainty about using the symbol for pi and a playful tone in the discussion, indicating a casual atmosphere. The problem's setup relies on the understanding of basic circle properties, but the clarity of the original poster's calculations remains unverified.

thomas576
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circles... and pie

ok so i found this site and I am learning about circles now :) http://www.mathgoodies.com/lessons/vol2/circumference.html

it says pie is 3.14 which is what you get when you divide the outer measurement of the circle by the diameter (pie being 3.14 as per his homework)

c/d=3.14 the question reads
in this problem i have used & to mean pie because i don't know how to make that symbol
circumference of a circle is 6&
find the radius...

so

6&/d=&

6(3.14)/d=3.14
18.84/d=3.14
18.84=3.14d
18.84/3.14=d
6=d
diameter is 2x radius so raidus is 3

sound right?
thanks again guys and gals!
 
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Its right.

You couldve saved some time by dividing both sides by pi in the first step
 
Just for reference, it is written pi. You can get the pi symbol by using LaTeX code. You write tex or itex in brackets and close them with /tex or /itex in brackets. Write \pi inbetween the code to get the symbol to show up.

Like this: [tex]\pi[/tex], click the symbol to see the code to write it.
 
thomas576 said:
in this problem i have used & to mean pie because i don't know how to make that symbol circumference of a circle is 6&

I like pie :-p However, I believe you are referring to the mathematical constant which whozum correctly spelled pi ..

If you want to make the symbol [tex]\pi[/tex] click on the one I made and a popup window will show the syntax you can use, to create it)

(while I was writing this, i see Candyman has a similar suggestion, I wonder if he/she also likes pie :-p )
 
mmmmm...pie...
 
FredGarvin said:
mmmmm...pie...
You are too late, Fred. I sneaked up on it all unnoticed yesterday.
You're welcome to the left-overs, however :smile:
 
Last edited:

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