Product: Office Supplies: Sticky Tape
Pi Tape   (+10, -1)  [vote for, against]
print rolls of tape with Pi sequence

Pi Tape are rolls of tape with a section of the numerical string that is the evaluation of Pi printed on them.

As the sequence is infinite, no two rolls of tape will ever be exactly the same. Good for wrapping presents to send to mathematicians etc.

Delux rolls have the internal spaces in numerals 9, 8, 6, 4 and 0s "coloured in".
-- xenzag, Oct 31 2009

Halfbakery: Bricks of Pi Bricks_20of_20Pi
Less popular than "Grapes of Wrath". [jutta, Oct 31 2009]

So it does not start at the beginning? You may as well print any list of random numbers on it, since Pi is infinite and must have that sequence in it at some point.
-- mitxela, Oct 31 2009


And I thought this was a measuring tape, graduated in units (inches, cm) on one side, and pies (pork, apple, scotch) on the other. That way, you could find out the circumference of anything by measuring the diameter or radius, and similarly you could find the diameter of anything by directly measuring the circumference. Great for calculating the volume of pork required to fill a certain size of crust.
-- pocmloc, Oct 31 2009


//since Pi is infinite// Actually I think it is quite a bit smaller than that... not much more than 3...
-- pocmloc, Oct 31 2009


//pi is infinite//

-ly continuous.
-- DrWorm, Oct 31 2009


That's the ticket.
-- mitxela, Oct 31 2009


//since Pi is infinite and must have that sequence in it at some point.// Not provable to be true, but possibly provable to be untrue for certain sequences. (refers to Kurt Gödel) Some infinities are of course greater than others - see also Cantor's "the cardinality of the continuum"

Anyway, the whole joy of the idea is that the sequences actually HAVE been derived from the Pi sequence and are not speculative strings.
-- xenzag, Oct 31 2009


this reminds me of your "bricks of pi" idea which had an interesting discussion about numbers.
-- xaviergisz, Oct 31 2009


[mitxela] // You may as well print any list of random numbers on it, since Pi is infinite and must have that sequence in it at some point.

That's actually not proven. (And the claim is becoming something of a pet peeve of mine over the years - we're launching into the same discussion at the very beginning of the "Bricks of Pi" conversation, so let me not repeat it here.)

I agree that even a trained mathematician is very unlikely to look at that number sequence and see anything but a long random string of digits, though.

[xenzag] // As the sequence is infinite, no two rolls of tape will ever be exactly the same.

They can't *all* be the same - but if the infinite sequence of pi ends up containing all finite sequences of numbers, there will be an infinite number of pairs of rolls with the exact same sequence on them. The company probably won't get around to printing them before the end of the universe, but...
-- jutta, Oct 31 2009


I'm constantly interested in the idea of an achievable product that nevertheless skirts the parameters of contradiction.

I refer to these in other work that I do in various terms such as: The Minor Dilemmas presented by Dualities of Reciprocity with a particular focus on the Cohesion of the Sticky Strands.
-- xenzag, Oct 31 2009


//As the sequence is infinite, no two rolls of tape will ever be exactly the same.// Not if you make enough rolls.
-- sninctown, Oct 31 2009


//must have that sequence in it at some point//

query for math-boys/girls: how big a segment of pi would you have to have in order to determine that it is indeed a "piece of pi" ?

mmmm, tape....
-- FlyingToaster, Oct 31 2009


From wikipedia: "....calculations that have determined over 1 trillion digits of Pi, no simple base-10 pattern in the digits has ever been found."

If each roll of tape had a string of 1,000 digits and the printing machinery was co-ordinated and computer linked so that no string was repeated, then you could make whatever number of rolls you get when you divide a trillion by a thousand, with a certified guarantee that each roll was unique.
-- xenzag, Oct 31 2009


//how big a segment of pi would you have to have in order to determine that it is indeed a "piece of pi" ?// To be a proper piece, it has to go right from the centre to the crust. Given the crumblability of pastry and the squodgability of filling, I am guessing that there might be a limit at about 10°, though experiments are clearly required.

If you are talking numbers, surely by definition it is the other way round, a single digit is demonstrably "part of pi". Similarly two. The task of demonstrating becomes harder as the number of digits increases.
-- pocmloc, Oct 31 2009


[xenzag] not for the first time, I'd suggest we're looking in the wrong base... try base e

I suppose there's a 1 in 10 (1 in e?) chance that the last digit of your reel of tape *is* he correct last-digit of Pi
-- Dub, Nov 01 2009


A pi measuring tape(metal spring type) in cm with only the pi digits marked. 3...-.1....4.1.....5..
-- wjt, Nov 01 2009


//calculations that have determined over 1 trillion digits of Pi, no simple base-10 pattern in the digits has ever been found//

hmmm, has anyone ever looked at how the sequence of prime numbers occurs within the decimal points of pi?
That is probably a stupid question because I can't find any hits using those words in any order but I wonder if there would be a pattern...

...and while I'm asking stupid questions, why is 1 not a prime number?
It should be a prime number.
It's like the primest number.
-- 2 fries shy of a happy meal, Nov 01 2009


WIKI: //...a prime number is a number which has exactly two divisors: 1 and itself.//
Well it can't have exactly 2 divisors, it only has the same one, twice.
Perhaps we should lobby for a different definition, something like a "Pr1me number is a number that when divided by any number other than itself and 1 gives a positive integer result"...
-- Dub, Nov 01 2009


It just seems a bit arbitrary to me.
I read about generations of math buffs trying to find patterns in the prime number sequence but have those same attempts been made without assuming that the number one is excluded?

One is the loneliest prime number that you'll never do.
Two can be as bad as one, as it's the substitute first prime number for the number one.
-- 2 fries shy of a happy meal, Nov 02 2009



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