There's a 9 repeating 6 times in there which I'd think is a pretty rare occurrence in pi. I wonder what the longest occurrence of a repeating digit is.
At work at the moment so can't go deep into it. But I think you misunderstand what non repeating numbers mean. Of course there are repeating numbers within pi which is fine, the issue would be if ALL the digits were to simply cycle over and repeat themselves. If however there are a few trillion digits then a series of 1's and 0's for ever, pi is still non repeating
I did read it, I also wrote it. Wasn't trying to put you down or anything just sharing a bit of knowledge I found interesting. I know many people (my self included at one point) assumed pi would have to include everything when that just isn't true. Apologies if I did a bad job explaining it though
That's fascinating. Obviously, there's a series of repeating numbers in there, and one of the numbers would have a highest number of repeats... until further places of pi are determined and another number knocks it off... I assume there's a repeating 1, or 2 that repeats 7 or 8 times,etc... at some point...
On a long enough string I'm guessing... Infinite? Pi isn't a pattern so does it follow the same "if monkeys hade an infinite amount of time to type at a typewriter they'd type Shakespeare"
Well I thought that at first, but it has to be less than infinite since other numbers have to repeat in there as well with at least some occurrence so it's infinite minus something, but since pi goes on infinitely, it's obviously some high number...