The ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter is Pi. (3.14159)
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Pi is the ratio of the circumference of a circle to the diameter. Thus for any circle, if you divide the circumference by the diameter, you get a value close to pi.
Pi is the mathematical term for the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter. If you divide the circumference of any circle by its diameter you will get exactly the same answer which is approximately 3.14.
Circumference is the specific term for the length of the perimeter of a circle. The perimeter of a circle is the circumference, and to find it, we need to know the radius or diameter of the circle. (As the diameter of a circle equals twice the radius of the circle, knowing one will mean we can know the other.) If we compare circles, we will find that all circles, regardless of their size, have something in common. The something is that all circles have in common is that the ratio between the diameter of any circle and its circumference is a constant. It's always the same for any size circle. And it's an irrational number we call pi. You've heard that, and that's what it is - a ratio. It's equal to about 3.14159 or so. (We know pi is an irrational number.) To find the circumference (c) of any circle, multiply pi (π) times its diameter (d). Or, multiply 2 times its radius (r) times pi (π). Same thing. Here are the two "versions" of the formula. c = π x d or c = 2 x π x r c equals pi times d or c equals two times pi times r. A link is provided to the Wikipedia article on circumference.
The circumference of any circle is (pi) x (the circle's diameter).
The circumference is not always 3.14 , The circumference of a circle is always (pi) times as long as the circle's diameter. (Pi) is a number that can't be exactly written down with digits, that begins with 3.14 . It's defined as the ratio of any circle's circumference to the same circle's diameter. The reason is because that's one of the properties of the thing that we call a "circle".