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Ar tic les » Math » Experimental Math » Experimental Math Part II: The Naughty, Naught y Li fe of Pi
Experimental Math Part II: The Naughty, Naughty Life of Pi
Nicholas Cage found this chart when heexposed the Constitution to an open
flame
What the hell did you put in my Pi?
Searching for naughty (tee hee!) words in the world’s most famoustranscendental number
I’m seeing a lot of buzz about the number Pi lately – must be with Pi day coming up(March 14 , 3-14 , get it?). Or maybe it’s a more general love affair with
transcendental numbers. Lots of interesting facto ids (or as I call them, “Factwads”)
are being bandied about, and one of them caught my eye – it has to do with the
interesting fact that Pi is a never-ending stream of seemingly -random digits.
They’re not really random, of c ourse, but they look random – if you read the first
100 digits of Pi, it will look like someone picked digits out of thin air.
So what’s so cool about that? This means that eventually you’ll find any combination of numbers in a row that
y ou want – somewhere along the string of decimal places, you’ll find “12345” for example. You will also find
y our birthday, somewhere. It might take a while to find it, but given y ou’ve got an infinite series to look
through, you’ll find it eventually . Somewhere in there is your cholesterol score, today’s winning lottery
number, tomorrow’s winning lottery number, the bank account balances of everyone on the planet, the 68
prime number – an y string of digits you can think of is in there somewhere.
What’s cooler is if y ou try encodingwords, English text, into numbers – which can then be found somewhere in
Pi. That means that any string of words, can be found (after suitable conversion to numbers) somewhere in the
digits of P i. Any phrase you’ve ev er uttered, any book ever written, even books not y et written, are in there
somewhere. Somewhere along Pi, is a copy of this very essay! The digits of Pi are essentially an ex ample of the
famous “monkeys on a typewriter” producing infinite possible strings of text, and it’s right there inside the
geometry of a circle.
So naturally, I decided I wanted to try to look for swear words in Pi.
The Recipe
So how do we actually go about this? There are lots of ways toencode letters into numbers – you probably remember doing
simple ciphers like A = 1, B = 2, etc. as a kid. That never got y ou
that coveted job at the CIA, did it? Tsk. For this exercise, I’m
using the ASCII encoding – for the purpose of computer typing,
every letter (and in fact every bit o f punctuation you can type on a
computer) has been assigned a number. For example, the letter ‘A’
gets assigned the two-digit number 65. Lowercase gets a different
number – ‘a’ is assigned to 97. If you’re curious, the percent sign
‘%’ gets assigned to 37. The table to the right shows the whole
ASCII code, if you’re interested. So now we can convert any word
into a string of numbers, by just stringing along the numeric ASCII
codes for each letter. So for ex ample, the word ‘FART’ becomes F
= 70, A = 65, R = 82, T = 84 = ‘70658284’. That four letter word
expands into an 8-digit number. Note that you don’t have to use
this encoding, and if you use a different one you’ll get different
results than I have. If you use an encoding that gets by with fewer
numeric digits, you’ll have better luck finding whatever phrase you
want in Pi, for reasons we’ll discuss below.
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Now, I need to get my hands on some Pi. Easy – a quick internet search turned up many copies of Pi out to
millions of digits, and I selected one that goes out to 100 million, available here
(http://archive.org/details/Pi_to_100000000_places). (Note that I didn’t check accuracy – once
timeblimp.com becomes a paying enterprise, I’ll double back and chec k his numbers.) Ideally I’d like to search
even farther along Pi, as I may need to search untold billions until I come across the phrases I want. But we’re
also limited by practical aspects of computing and time, so for now I’m limiting myself to 100 million decimal
places. Now it’s simple to write a computer program to search for any arbitrary string of letters in the entire
100-million sequence of digits. It doesn’t take quite as long as you’d think, so I was able to find a dictionary of
17 0 thousand English words, which I could then search for in Pi, one by one. With particular attention on
certain four-letter words….
The Results
So what happened? Well, I can’t find shit in Pi, but I can sure find plenty of o ther interesting words. The f irst
mildly naughty word we come across is ‘SUCK’, at position 3,833,07 2. That might sound like a pretty large
number of decimal places, but that’s actually relatively early along for a four-letter word. We also come across
‘BARF’ at 4 ,843,188. The quite useful word ‘CRAP’ appears at 51,557 ,663, and my personal favorite, ‘JIZZ’
appears at position 18,953,642. So now I can say that I found some jizz in my Pi.
Here are all the four-letter words I could think of that I managed to find in the first 100 million digits of Pi:
suck 3,833,072
barf 4,843,188
jizz 18,953,642
crap 51,557 ,663
damn 56,877,107
cunt 69,223,089
cock 80,511,580
blow 82,475,138
darn 87,773,859
While it’s a theoretical certainty that some longer phrase (e.g. ‘I got your Pi right HERE’) appears in the digits of
Pi, as a practical matter it will be very difficult to find. We find two-letter words all over the place, three letter
words fairly commonly, but the first commonly-known four-letter word to show up in Pi according to my
scheme is ‘RUTS’, at position 17,34 6. I can’t find a five-letter word until almost 3 million positions in, the word
‘FLOWN’ at position 2,860,850. Not surprisingly, the difficulty of finding any given N-letter word grows
exponentially as N increases.
To illustrate this, below is a plot showing the results I got in trying to find about 170,000 English words in the
first 5 million digits of Pi. We see tons of 3-letter words, a fair portion of 4-letter words (though far less than 3-
letter words), and just a couple of 5-letter words. As you might have guessed, the longer the word, the harder it
is to find.
So if you’re looking for your favorite swear word in Pi, and it happens to be pretty long (like my friend
@peterwoodward, who continues to pester me to find “FUCKFACE” in Pi), you better be prepared to hunt for a
while. As a rule of thumb, for my encoding scheme y ou’ll need to hunt through 10^(2N) digits of Pi to have a
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reasonable chance at finding a string of letters of length N. For this essay, which is about 10,000 letters long,
you’d have to hunt through 10^20,000 digits in Pi, which is a gogol raised to the 200 power. Keep in mind
that the number of atoms in the universe ismuch less than one gogol . So there’s nowhere near enough material
in the universe to form a piece of paper (or computer) large enough to store the digits of Pi you’d need to
eventually stumble across this particular essay!
That’s pretty nerdy… but can you really go overboard with all this stuff?
Me? No, I’m stopping here. Other people? Oh, you betcha! I’ve learned by this point in my career that when I
take something to a nerdy ex treme, someone else surely has outdone me by a mile. And for Pi, probably the
most famous transcendental number of them all? There are endless fascinating topics to explore about the
wonders of Pi. Here are a few other folks exploring the search for patterns in Pi, to whet your whistle.
If you’re wondering if there’s any way you could look up your favorite word in the digits of Pi (aside fro
contacting me on twitter, @timeblimp), head on over to the Search For Pi page, mathematician David Bailey
has set up a webpage where you can search any word you want in the first four billion digits of Pi. With that kind
of room, you can fairly easily find words up to 7 or 8 letters long, which makes the usual four-letter swear words
a piece of cake to f ind.
Over at The Pi Code, Mike Keith has taken my amateurish fumbling and made it the real deal. He’s followed
up on the observation that a more efficient coding of letters-to-numbers than the ASCII Code might be more
fruitful, by using Base 26 for the conversion – much more natural for our 26-letter alphabet. For his encoding
scheme, he’s estimated how often we’d expect to see an N-letter word show up in the digits of pi, and it clearly
shows the exponential growth I observed – we should see 4-letter words every 81 positions, but 8-letter words
every 5.7 million positions. The first six-letter word he found was “OXYGEN”, which is appropriate, as that’s
what nerds like us need after walking up a flight of stairs.
Keith takes it up a notch by then considering Pi in TWO DIMENSIONS (cue epic music) – specifically , write out
the digits of Pi in a grid, then look for words in the old word-search style, up, down, left, right, and diagonally.
This gives you a little more chance to find something interesting (more “degrees of freedom” for interesting
coincidences to happen), and sure enough, he’s able to find lots of examples of words, including spooky
examples such as “ALPHA”, “OMEGA”, and “GOD” appearing all in the same little grid about 150k positions in,
and of course “DEMON” and “SATAN” in another grid at ~250k.
Finally, Keith points out that if you do another simple substitution-type conversion of letters to numbers, by
using the old substitution cipher A = 1, B = 2, the first few digits of Pi are:
3 . 14 15 9 26 5 …
Which decodes to “C.NOIZE” – get it? You’re “Seeing noise” when you look at digits in Pi! Hmmm, that’s kind
of mean of Pi to rub it in our faces like that. What a fuckface.
Check out Keith’s page for lots more interesting discoveries in the hunt for English words in Pi, using his base-
26 scheme.
If this is all too mathy for you, you might want to explore the humanities side of Pi, and look into Writing in
Pilish. The idea is to write a story about any topic y ou want, with one important constraint – each word in
your story has to be of length exac tly equal to the corresponding digit in Pi. So y our f irst five words need to
have lengths 3, 1 , 4 , 1, and 5, and you try to keep going as long as you can, sticking to the pattern. How far do
you think y ou could keep it up? Maybe 6 or 7 words? Maybe eke out a sentence? Well sit down, friend,
because Mike Keith has written a 10,000-word novella called “Not A Wake“, written entirely in Pilish. Pick up
his book on Amazon, for the low low list price of Pi^2 + Pi/2 !
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