32. Using TAU
What is TAU?
Short answer: It is the Greek letter .
Long answer: It is a Greek letter used to define the proportion of the circumference of a circle to its radius. Put simply, TAU is one turn of an entire circle, so 2*PI.
TAU allows us to express sinuses, cosines, and angles in a more intuitive and simple way. For instance, the well-known angles of 300, 450, 900, and so on can be easily expressed in radians via TAU as a fraction of a circle, as in the following figure:
Figure 1.25: Angles represented using TAU
This is more intuitive than PI. It is like slicing a pie into equal parts. For instance, if we slice at TAU/8 (450), it means that we sliced the pie into eight equal parts. If we slice at TAU/4 (900), it means that we sliced the pie into four equal parts.
The value of TAU is 6.283185307179586 = 2 * 3.141592653589793. So the relationship between TAU and PI is TAU=2*PI. In Java, the well-known PI is represented via the Math.PI
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