Art of Problem Solving

Circumference: Difference between revisions

No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{{stub}}
{{stub}}


'''Circumference''' typically refers to the distance around a [[circle]], though it may refer to the distance around any [[closed curve]] like an [[ellipse]], though calculating the circumference of an [[ellipse]] is moderately harder than calculating the circumference of a circle. The '''circumference''' of a [[circle]] is typically solved by <math>\pi \cdot d</math> where <math>d</math> represents a circle's [[diameter]], though <math> \pi \cdot r </math> certainly works as well.
'''Circumference''' typically refers to the distance around a [[circle]], though it may refer to the distance around any [[closed curve]] like an [[ellipse]], though calculating the circumference of an [[ellipse]] is moderately harder than calculating the circumference of a circle. The '''circumference''' of a [[circle]] is typically solved by <math>\pi \cdot d</math> where <math>d</math> represents a circle's [[diameter]], though <math> \pi \cdot 2 r </math> certainly works as well.





Revision as of 17:26, 8 July 2007

This article is a stub. Help us out by expanding it.

Circumference typically refers to the distance around a circle, though it may refer to the distance around any closed curve like an ellipse, though calculating the circumference of an ellipse is moderately harder than calculating the circumference of a circle. The circumference of a circle is typically solved by $\pi \cdot d$ where $d$ represents a circle's diameter, though $\pi \cdot 2 r$ certainly works as well.


See also