The Non Transcendental, Exact Value of π and the Squaring of the Circle

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C.B.
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Joined: Mon Aug 18, 2025 9:21 am

Re: The Non Transcendental, Exact Value of π and the Squaring of the Circle

Post by C.B. »

Ok. Good to know. Thanks.
omedam777
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Re: The Non Transcendental, Exact Value of π and the Squaring of the Circle

Post by omedam777 »

Image

Image

Unsure if this will work. Let's see. If you can see the image, can you spot anything unusual?
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C.B.
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Re: The Non Transcendental, Exact Value of π and the Squaring of the Circle

Post by C.B. »

I can’t see any image…...
omedam777
Posts: 46
Joined: Sun Aug 10, 2025 3:18 pm

Re: The Non Transcendental, Exact Value of π and the Squaring of the Circle

Post by omedam777 »

Screenshot_20250902-170939_Desmos.jpg
Screenshot_20250902-170939_Desmos.jpg (251.31 KiB) Viewed 97889 times
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How about now?
C.B.
Posts: 90
Joined: Mon Aug 18, 2025 9:21 am

Re: The Non Transcendental, Exact Value of π and the Squaring of the Circle

Post by C.B. »

If I’m supposed to see a graph, I don’t.
omedam777
Posts: 46
Joined: Sun Aug 10, 2025 3:18 pm

Re: The Non Transcendental, Exact Value of π and the Squaring of the Circle

Post by omedam777 »

Are you able to see an image? Numbers? Anything?
C.B.
Posts: 90
Joined: Mon Aug 18, 2025 9:21 am

Re: The Non Transcendental, Exact Value of π and the Squaring of the Circle

Post by C.B. »

Only equations…..
omedam777
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Joined: Sun Aug 10, 2025 3:18 pm

Re: The Non Transcendental, Exact Value of π and the Squaring of the Circle

Post by omedam777 »

That is basically what I want you to look at :roll:
C.B.
Posts: 90
Joined: Mon Aug 18, 2025 9:21 am

Re: The Non Transcendental, Exact Value of π and the Squaring of the Circle

Post by C.B. »

Ok. I have seen them but you should tell me something about the meaning of all that.
omedam777
Posts: 46
Joined: Sun Aug 10, 2025 3:18 pm

Re: The Non Transcendental, Exact Value of π and the Squaring of the Circle

Post by omedam777 »

well I figured that since Pi is Circumference divided by the diamter of a circle, I tried to somewhat "recreate" Pi using that age-old formula.

I had to re-do it through different iterations and figured out a flaw in the Pi we currently use (3.1416...).

In the other iterations I tried, I started with C as the circumference and gave it 1 as the base unit.

Afterwards I presented the diamtere as "d" and gave it a value of (1/pi)*C, to which the value is 0.31830988618 (while using the current conventional Pi).

Then I tested, and this gave me a result of 3.1416 as I would've expected.

Later on, I created "r" as the radius of the circle with a value of d/2 (that's basic arithmetic... just divide the diameter by two), and also created half the side of a square as "s" with a value of "C/8" with in mind the squaring the circle. In doing so, the value of "C" always remains the same, no matter the Pi which is being used.

As a matter of fact, if we were to do 4s/r (which would be representative of 4/sqrt(phi)), then the resulting Pi would reflect exactly the one which was chosen. In order to ensure that the proof is sound, we use the following equations for both the redius and half side of a square:

1) radius = r_1 = sqrt((r^2/s)^2-s^2) -> the result MUST BE THE SAME AS THE INITAL RADIUS

2) 1/2 side of a square = s_1 = r^2/sqrt(r^2+s^2) -> the result MUST BE THE SAME AS THE INITAL 1/2 SIDE FOR A SQUARE

then we formulate for the TRUE PI -> 4s_1/r_1 -> this will reveal discrepencies in the Pi we input in d = (1/pi)*C, and only 3.144605511029693144... will come out of this mathematical showdown as the victor, while at the same time revealing the Golden Ratio through (r_1/s_1)^2.

I made a video on this recently on Youtube. You should check it out: https://youtu.be/TT5FAvMap2o
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