An irrational number is any real number which is not rational. More systematically, it is the set of numbers which cannot be represented as the quotient of two integers and , where , thus having a non-repeating, non-terminating decimal representation.
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| - An irrational number is any real number which is not rational. More systematically, it is the set of numbers which cannot be represented as the quotient of two integers and , where , thus having a non-repeating, non-terminating decimal representation.
- Irrational numbers are the series of numbers that refuse to act rationally. They follow no rules and tend to come out in illogical patterns like 3.1415926535897923... I mean, that doesn't make any sense? Irrational numbers lack rationale, as they never seem to follow any set sort of pattern and seem to go on and on in any random and messed up order. Examples of these seemingly ridiculous numbers include pi, e and the square-root of 2.
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| - An irrational number is any real number which is not rational. More systematically, it is the set of numbers which cannot be represented as the quotient of two integers and , where , thus having a non-repeating, non-terminating decimal representation.
- Irrational numbers are the series of numbers that refuse to act rationally. They follow no rules and tend to come out in illogical patterns like 3.1415926535897923... I mean, that doesn't make any sense? Irrational numbers lack rationale, as they never seem to follow any set sort of pattern and seem to go on and on in any random and messed up order. Examples of these seemingly ridiculous numbers include pi, e and the square-root of 2.
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