Pi Day Extraordinaire
First time accepted submitter DrTJ writes Today is Pi day. This year is a bit more extraordinary as it is 3/14/15 (in American date format). To celebrate, USA Today has posted a number of videos of kids reciting Pi, one of them to 8,784 digits. The Washington Post highlights the story of a couple who decided to make it their special day. "Donahue, 33, a Legal Aid attorney, fell for Karmel’s geeky side as soon as they met. On a beach vacation with her friends in 2012, a psychic told her, 'You are about to meet your soulmate.' Three days later, she walked into Kostume Karaoke night at Solly’s Tavern along the U Street corridor and saw a man onstage croaking out the Backstreet Boys’s 'I Want It That Way.' By the end of the night, he would be serenading her with Cake’s 'The Distance' — the song the DJ will play when they cut the pie."
Anglesey-born William Jones was the first person to use the Greek letter Ï for the ratio of a circleâ(TM)s circumference to its diameter. But who was this little-known figure? http://www.theguardian.com/sci...
Isn't that only true in a Romulan leap year?
Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know.
Ernest Hemingway
I find this one particular irrational.
Not just irrational, but transcendental as well. A rational reason to celebrate today is that it is Albert Einstein's birthday.
You "really hate" moving the year from the start to the finish?
I know I do. For two reasons:
Year at the front in YYYY-mm-dd format (with leading zeros on single digit months and days) lets you sort sort dates as text without having to do anything extra. That's more than a little bit convenient in a LOT of situations.
The other issue with mm-dd-YYYY is that is indistinguishable from dd-mm-YYYY for a stupidly large number of dates; and both versions are in common use -in english speaking countries (US is mm/dd/yyyy; UK is dd/mm/yyyy so its a nightmare.) I've seen documents with both formats used interchangeably.
If you see YYYY-nn-mm you KNOW its Year-month-day, because nobody anywhere ever uses YYYY-day-month.
...for the rest of the world that counts dates logically