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Welcoming 2019 Pi day: How to draw the letter π?


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3
















How to draw the letter π not in the standard way (i.e. pi)?




I mean "draw", not "type"! Today there will be no pi, but there will be something like this



documentclass[tikz]{standalone}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
draw (0,2)--(3,2);
draw (1,0)--(1,2);
draw (2,0)--(2,2);
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}


enter image description here



(inspired by David Carlisle – I draw this in TikZ just because I don't know how to use picture ;))



Or this



documentclass[tikz]{standalone}
usepackage{tikzducks}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
duck
duck[xshift=1cm,yshift=2cm]
duck[xshift=1cm,yshift=4cm]
duck[xshift=1cm,yshift=6cm]
duck[xshift=0cm,yshift=8cm]
duck[xshift=-2cm,yshift=7.5cm]
duck[xshift=2cm,yshift=8cm]
duck[xshift=4cm,yshift=8cm]
duck[xshift=6cm,yshift=8cm]
duck[xshift=8cm,yshift=8cm]
duck[xshift=5cm,yshift=6cm]
duck[xshift=5cm,yshift=4cm]
duck[xshift=5.5cm,yshift=2cm]
duck[xshift=6.5cm,yshift=0cm]
duck[xshift=8cm,yshift=1cm]
node[font=huge] at (4,11) {Happy $pi$ day with verb|tikzducks|!};
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}


enter image description here



They are my proudest π drawings, and as today is Pi day, I'd like to see yours!










share|improve this question























  • Beat this one: ioccc.org/1989/roemer.c

    – user49915
    21 mins ago













  • @user49915 I don't think we can have the output and the code being exactly the same :))

    – JouleV
    12 mins ago











  • Though, I guess, a really useful one would be a sans-serif normalfont upright math capital Pi with xelatex and OTF fonts. You may ask "why", and the answer would be "since it's not a part of Unicode". As for for useless ones, I still see documentclass, begin, draw, tikz, linespread, ...; the output is all nice anyway, and I like all the solutions here.

    – user49915
    11 mins ago













  • You can probably have the code and the output close enough; you only have to pepper the Makefile compiling the code by suitable awk or sed scripts. In theory, you can have them exactly the same, since tex is Turing-complete (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quine_(computing)), but it's unlikely to print Pi in any sense of the word.

    – user49915
    6 mins ago


















3
















How to draw the letter π not in the standard way (i.e. pi)?




I mean "draw", not "type"! Today there will be no pi, but there will be something like this



documentclass[tikz]{standalone}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
draw (0,2)--(3,2);
draw (1,0)--(1,2);
draw (2,0)--(2,2);
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}


enter image description here



(inspired by David Carlisle – I draw this in TikZ just because I don't know how to use picture ;))



Or this



documentclass[tikz]{standalone}
usepackage{tikzducks}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
duck
duck[xshift=1cm,yshift=2cm]
duck[xshift=1cm,yshift=4cm]
duck[xshift=1cm,yshift=6cm]
duck[xshift=0cm,yshift=8cm]
duck[xshift=-2cm,yshift=7.5cm]
duck[xshift=2cm,yshift=8cm]
duck[xshift=4cm,yshift=8cm]
duck[xshift=6cm,yshift=8cm]
duck[xshift=8cm,yshift=8cm]
duck[xshift=5cm,yshift=6cm]
duck[xshift=5cm,yshift=4cm]
duck[xshift=5.5cm,yshift=2cm]
duck[xshift=6.5cm,yshift=0cm]
duck[xshift=8cm,yshift=1cm]
node[font=huge] at (4,11) {Happy $pi$ day with verb|tikzducks|!};
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}


enter image description here



They are my proudest π drawings, and as today is Pi day, I'd like to see yours!










share|improve this question























  • Beat this one: ioccc.org/1989/roemer.c

    – user49915
    21 mins ago













  • @user49915 I don't think we can have the output and the code being exactly the same :))

    – JouleV
    12 mins ago











  • Though, I guess, a really useful one would be a sans-serif normalfont upright math capital Pi with xelatex and OTF fonts. You may ask "why", and the answer would be "since it's not a part of Unicode". As for for useless ones, I still see documentclass, begin, draw, tikz, linespread, ...; the output is all nice anyway, and I like all the solutions here.

    – user49915
    11 mins ago













  • You can probably have the code and the output close enough; you only have to pepper the Makefile compiling the code by suitable awk or sed scripts. In theory, you can have them exactly the same, since tex is Turing-complete (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quine_(computing)), but it's unlikely to print Pi in any sense of the word.

    – user49915
    6 mins ago
















3












3








3









How to draw the letter π not in the standard way (i.e. pi)?




I mean "draw", not "type"! Today there will be no pi, but there will be something like this



documentclass[tikz]{standalone}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
draw (0,2)--(3,2);
draw (1,0)--(1,2);
draw (2,0)--(2,2);
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}


enter image description here



(inspired by David Carlisle – I draw this in TikZ just because I don't know how to use picture ;))



Or this



documentclass[tikz]{standalone}
usepackage{tikzducks}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
duck
duck[xshift=1cm,yshift=2cm]
duck[xshift=1cm,yshift=4cm]
duck[xshift=1cm,yshift=6cm]
duck[xshift=0cm,yshift=8cm]
duck[xshift=-2cm,yshift=7.5cm]
duck[xshift=2cm,yshift=8cm]
duck[xshift=4cm,yshift=8cm]
duck[xshift=6cm,yshift=8cm]
duck[xshift=8cm,yshift=8cm]
duck[xshift=5cm,yshift=6cm]
duck[xshift=5cm,yshift=4cm]
duck[xshift=5.5cm,yshift=2cm]
duck[xshift=6.5cm,yshift=0cm]
duck[xshift=8cm,yshift=1cm]
node[font=huge] at (4,11) {Happy $pi$ day with verb|tikzducks|!};
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}


enter image description here



They are my proudest π drawings, and as today is Pi day, I'd like to see yours!










share|improve this question















How to draw the letter π not in the standard way (i.e. pi)?




I mean "draw", not "type"! Today there will be no pi, but there will be something like this



documentclass[tikz]{standalone}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
draw (0,2)--(3,2);
draw (1,0)--(1,2);
draw (2,0)--(2,2);
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}


enter image description here



(inspired by David Carlisle – I draw this in TikZ just because I don't know how to use picture ;))



Or this



documentclass[tikz]{standalone}
usepackage{tikzducks}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
duck
duck[xshift=1cm,yshift=2cm]
duck[xshift=1cm,yshift=4cm]
duck[xshift=1cm,yshift=6cm]
duck[xshift=0cm,yshift=8cm]
duck[xshift=-2cm,yshift=7.5cm]
duck[xshift=2cm,yshift=8cm]
duck[xshift=4cm,yshift=8cm]
duck[xshift=6cm,yshift=8cm]
duck[xshift=8cm,yshift=8cm]
duck[xshift=5cm,yshift=6cm]
duck[xshift=5cm,yshift=4cm]
duck[xshift=5.5cm,yshift=2cm]
duck[xshift=6.5cm,yshift=0cm]
duck[xshift=8cm,yshift=1cm]
node[font=huge] at (4,11) {Happy $pi$ day with verb|tikzducks|!};
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}


enter image description here



They are my proudest π drawings, and as today is Pi day, I'd like to see yours!







tikz-pgf fun tikzducks tikzlings picture-environment






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked 1 hour ago









JouleVJouleV

5,31121242




5,31121242













  • Beat this one: ioccc.org/1989/roemer.c

    – user49915
    21 mins ago













  • @user49915 I don't think we can have the output and the code being exactly the same :))

    – JouleV
    12 mins ago











  • Though, I guess, a really useful one would be a sans-serif normalfont upright math capital Pi with xelatex and OTF fonts. You may ask "why", and the answer would be "since it's not a part of Unicode". As for for useless ones, I still see documentclass, begin, draw, tikz, linespread, ...; the output is all nice anyway, and I like all the solutions here.

    – user49915
    11 mins ago













  • You can probably have the code and the output close enough; you only have to pepper the Makefile compiling the code by suitable awk or sed scripts. In theory, you can have them exactly the same, since tex is Turing-complete (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quine_(computing)), but it's unlikely to print Pi in any sense of the word.

    – user49915
    6 mins ago





















  • Beat this one: ioccc.org/1989/roemer.c

    – user49915
    21 mins ago













  • @user49915 I don't think we can have the output and the code being exactly the same :))

    – JouleV
    12 mins ago











  • Though, I guess, a really useful one would be a sans-serif normalfont upright math capital Pi with xelatex and OTF fonts. You may ask "why", and the answer would be "since it's not a part of Unicode". As for for useless ones, I still see documentclass, begin, draw, tikz, linespread, ...; the output is all nice anyway, and I like all the solutions here.

    – user49915
    11 mins ago













  • You can probably have the code and the output close enough; you only have to pepper the Makefile compiling the code by suitable awk or sed scripts. In theory, you can have them exactly the same, since tex is Turing-complete (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quine_(computing)), but it's unlikely to print Pi in any sense of the word.

    – user49915
    6 mins ago



















Beat this one: ioccc.org/1989/roemer.c

– user49915
21 mins ago







Beat this one: ioccc.org/1989/roemer.c

– user49915
21 mins ago















@user49915 I don't think we can have the output and the code being exactly the same :))

– JouleV
12 mins ago





@user49915 I don't think we can have the output and the code being exactly the same :))

– JouleV
12 mins ago













Though, I guess, a really useful one would be a sans-serif normalfont upright math capital Pi with xelatex and OTF fonts. You may ask "why", and the answer would be "since it's not a part of Unicode". As for for useless ones, I still see documentclass, begin, draw, tikz, linespread, ...; the output is all nice anyway, and I like all the solutions here.

– user49915
11 mins ago







Though, I guess, a really useful one would be a sans-serif normalfont upright math capital Pi with xelatex and OTF fonts. You may ask "why", and the answer would be "since it's not a part of Unicode". As for for useless ones, I still see documentclass, begin, draw, tikz, linespread, ...; the output is all nice anyway, and I like all the solutions here.

– user49915
11 mins ago















You can probably have the code and the output close enough; you only have to pepper the Makefile compiling the code by suitable awk or sed scripts. In theory, you can have them exactly the same, since tex is Turing-complete (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quine_(computing)), but it's unlikely to print Pi in any sense of the word.

– user49915
6 mins ago







You can probably have the code and the output close enough; you only have to pepper the Makefile compiling the code by suitable awk or sed scripts. In theory, you can have them exactly the same, since tex is Turing-complete (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quine_(computing)), but it's unlikely to print Pi in any sense of the word.

– user49915
6 mins ago












3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















3














Writing π with the digits of π - using the verbatim environment.



enter image description here



documentclass{article}
linespread{0.7}
begin{document}
begin{verbatim}
3.141592653589793238462643383279
5028841971693993751058209749445923
07816406286208998628034825342117067
9821 48086 5132
823 06647 09384
46 09550 58223
17 25359 4081
2848 1117
4502 8410
2701 9385
21105 55964
46229 48954
9303 81964
4288 10975
66593 34461
284756 48233
78678 31652 71
2019091 456485 66
9234603 48610454326648
2133936 0726024914127
3724587 00660631558
817488 152092096
end{verbatim}
end{document}


Based on ascii art drawing by Jorel - https://www.flickr.com/photos/jorel314/3352784321/






share|improve this answer


























  • How did you format the code? By trial/error?

    – Sigur
    27 mins ago











  • @Sigur I did it by hand, but based off an ascii art drawing I found online. Added a reference to the original drawing.

    – Milo
    15 mins ago













  • Nice. Though, not quite: you simply draw it rather than computing it :-).

    – user49915
    13 mins ago



















2














Happy pi(less) day!!



enter image description here



documentclass{report}
begin{document}
noindent%
rule{30pt}{1pt}\[-1pt]
rule{8pt}{0pt}%
rule{1pt}{30pt}%
rule{12pt}{0pt}%
rule{1pt}{30pt}
end{document}





share|improve this answer

































    1














    One should also honor Euler a bit.



    documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]{standalone}
    usepackage{tikzlings,amsmath}
    makeatletter
    tikzset{/thing/.cd,
    pie/.code=thing@cheesetruedefthing@cheese{#1}, %<-pretend you didn't see that
    pie/.default=pink!70!red}
    makeatother
    begin{document}
    begin{tikzpicture}[font=sffamily]
    marmot[pie,whiskers,teeth,shadow]
    node[anchor=east,scale=5,transform shape] at (-0.6,1) {$picdotmathsf{e}=text{sffamily pie}$};
    end{tikzpicture}
    end{document}


    enter image description here





    share























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      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes








      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      3














      Writing π with the digits of π - using the verbatim environment.



      enter image description here



      documentclass{article}
      linespread{0.7}
      begin{document}
      begin{verbatim}
      3.141592653589793238462643383279
      5028841971693993751058209749445923
      07816406286208998628034825342117067
      9821 48086 5132
      823 06647 09384
      46 09550 58223
      17 25359 4081
      2848 1117
      4502 8410
      2701 9385
      21105 55964
      46229 48954
      9303 81964
      4288 10975
      66593 34461
      284756 48233
      78678 31652 71
      2019091 456485 66
      9234603 48610454326648
      2133936 0726024914127
      3724587 00660631558
      817488 152092096
      end{verbatim}
      end{document}


      Based on ascii art drawing by Jorel - https://www.flickr.com/photos/jorel314/3352784321/






      share|improve this answer


























      • How did you format the code? By trial/error?

        – Sigur
        27 mins ago











      • @Sigur I did it by hand, but based off an ascii art drawing I found online. Added a reference to the original drawing.

        – Milo
        15 mins ago













      • Nice. Though, not quite: you simply draw it rather than computing it :-).

        – user49915
        13 mins ago
















      3














      Writing π with the digits of π - using the verbatim environment.



      enter image description here



      documentclass{article}
      linespread{0.7}
      begin{document}
      begin{verbatim}
      3.141592653589793238462643383279
      5028841971693993751058209749445923
      07816406286208998628034825342117067
      9821 48086 5132
      823 06647 09384
      46 09550 58223
      17 25359 4081
      2848 1117
      4502 8410
      2701 9385
      21105 55964
      46229 48954
      9303 81964
      4288 10975
      66593 34461
      284756 48233
      78678 31652 71
      2019091 456485 66
      9234603 48610454326648
      2133936 0726024914127
      3724587 00660631558
      817488 152092096
      end{verbatim}
      end{document}


      Based on ascii art drawing by Jorel - https://www.flickr.com/photos/jorel314/3352784321/






      share|improve this answer


























      • How did you format the code? By trial/error?

        – Sigur
        27 mins ago











      • @Sigur I did it by hand, but based off an ascii art drawing I found online. Added a reference to the original drawing.

        – Milo
        15 mins ago













      • Nice. Though, not quite: you simply draw it rather than computing it :-).

        – user49915
        13 mins ago














      3












      3








      3







      Writing π with the digits of π - using the verbatim environment.



      enter image description here



      documentclass{article}
      linespread{0.7}
      begin{document}
      begin{verbatim}
      3.141592653589793238462643383279
      5028841971693993751058209749445923
      07816406286208998628034825342117067
      9821 48086 5132
      823 06647 09384
      46 09550 58223
      17 25359 4081
      2848 1117
      4502 8410
      2701 9385
      21105 55964
      46229 48954
      9303 81964
      4288 10975
      66593 34461
      284756 48233
      78678 31652 71
      2019091 456485 66
      9234603 48610454326648
      2133936 0726024914127
      3724587 00660631558
      817488 152092096
      end{verbatim}
      end{document}


      Based on ascii art drawing by Jorel - https://www.flickr.com/photos/jorel314/3352784321/






      share|improve this answer















      Writing π with the digits of π - using the verbatim environment.



      enter image description here



      documentclass{article}
      linespread{0.7}
      begin{document}
      begin{verbatim}
      3.141592653589793238462643383279
      5028841971693993751058209749445923
      07816406286208998628034825342117067
      9821 48086 5132
      823 06647 09384
      46 09550 58223
      17 25359 4081
      2848 1117
      4502 8410
      2701 9385
      21105 55964
      46229 48954
      9303 81964
      4288 10975
      66593 34461
      284756 48233
      78678 31652 71
      2019091 456485 66
      9234603 48610454326648
      2133936 0726024914127
      3724587 00660631558
      817488 152092096
      end{verbatim}
      end{document}


      Based on ascii art drawing by Jorel - https://www.flickr.com/photos/jorel314/3352784321/







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited 18 mins ago

























      answered 30 mins ago









      MiloMilo

      6,42221650




      6,42221650













      • How did you format the code? By trial/error?

        – Sigur
        27 mins ago











      • @Sigur I did it by hand, but based off an ascii art drawing I found online. Added a reference to the original drawing.

        – Milo
        15 mins ago













      • Nice. Though, not quite: you simply draw it rather than computing it :-).

        – user49915
        13 mins ago



















      • How did you format the code? By trial/error?

        – Sigur
        27 mins ago











      • @Sigur I did it by hand, but based off an ascii art drawing I found online. Added a reference to the original drawing.

        – Milo
        15 mins ago













      • Nice. Though, not quite: you simply draw it rather than computing it :-).

        – user49915
        13 mins ago

















      How did you format the code? By trial/error?

      – Sigur
      27 mins ago





      How did you format the code? By trial/error?

      – Sigur
      27 mins ago













      @Sigur I did it by hand, but based off an ascii art drawing I found online. Added a reference to the original drawing.

      – Milo
      15 mins ago







      @Sigur I did it by hand, but based off an ascii art drawing I found online. Added a reference to the original drawing.

      – Milo
      15 mins ago















      Nice. Though, not quite: you simply draw it rather than computing it :-).

      – user49915
      13 mins ago





      Nice. Though, not quite: you simply draw it rather than computing it :-).

      – user49915
      13 mins ago











      2














      Happy pi(less) day!!



      enter image description here



      documentclass{report}
      begin{document}
      noindent%
      rule{30pt}{1pt}\[-1pt]
      rule{8pt}{0pt}%
      rule{1pt}{30pt}%
      rule{12pt}{0pt}%
      rule{1pt}{30pt}
      end{document}





      share|improve this answer






























        2














        Happy pi(less) day!!



        enter image description here



        documentclass{report}
        begin{document}
        noindent%
        rule{30pt}{1pt}\[-1pt]
        rule{8pt}{0pt}%
        rule{1pt}{30pt}%
        rule{12pt}{0pt}%
        rule{1pt}{30pt}
        end{document}





        share|improve this answer




























          2












          2








          2







          Happy pi(less) day!!



          enter image description here



          documentclass{report}
          begin{document}
          noindent%
          rule{30pt}{1pt}\[-1pt]
          rule{8pt}{0pt}%
          rule{1pt}{30pt}%
          rule{12pt}{0pt}%
          rule{1pt}{30pt}
          end{document}





          share|improve this answer















          Happy pi(less) day!!



          enter image description here



          documentclass{report}
          begin{document}
          noindent%
          rule{30pt}{1pt}\[-1pt]
          rule{8pt}{0pt}%
          rule{1pt}{30pt}%
          rule{12pt}{0pt}%
          rule{1pt}{30pt}
          end{document}






          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited 58 mins ago

























          answered 1 hour ago









          SigurSigur

          25.9k457140




          25.9k457140























              1














              One should also honor Euler a bit.



              documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]{standalone}
              usepackage{tikzlings,amsmath}
              makeatletter
              tikzset{/thing/.cd,
              pie/.code=thing@cheesetruedefthing@cheese{#1}, %<-pretend you didn't see that
              pie/.default=pink!70!red}
              makeatother
              begin{document}
              begin{tikzpicture}[font=sffamily]
              marmot[pie,whiskers,teeth,shadow]
              node[anchor=east,scale=5,transform shape] at (-0.6,1) {$picdotmathsf{e}=text{sffamily pie}$};
              end{tikzpicture}
              end{document}


              enter image description here





              share




























                1














                One should also honor Euler a bit.



                documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]{standalone}
                usepackage{tikzlings,amsmath}
                makeatletter
                tikzset{/thing/.cd,
                pie/.code=thing@cheesetruedefthing@cheese{#1}, %<-pretend you didn't see that
                pie/.default=pink!70!red}
                makeatother
                begin{document}
                begin{tikzpicture}[font=sffamily]
                marmot[pie,whiskers,teeth,shadow]
                node[anchor=east,scale=5,transform shape] at (-0.6,1) {$picdotmathsf{e}=text{sffamily pie}$};
                end{tikzpicture}
                end{document}


                enter image description here





                share


























                  1












                  1








                  1







                  One should also honor Euler a bit.



                  documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]{standalone}
                  usepackage{tikzlings,amsmath}
                  makeatletter
                  tikzset{/thing/.cd,
                  pie/.code=thing@cheesetruedefthing@cheese{#1}, %<-pretend you didn't see that
                  pie/.default=pink!70!red}
                  makeatother
                  begin{document}
                  begin{tikzpicture}[font=sffamily]
                  marmot[pie,whiskers,teeth,shadow]
                  node[anchor=east,scale=5,transform shape] at (-0.6,1) {$picdotmathsf{e}=text{sffamily pie}$};
                  end{tikzpicture}
                  end{document}


                  enter image description here





                  share













                  One should also honor Euler a bit.



                  documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]{standalone}
                  usepackage{tikzlings,amsmath}
                  makeatletter
                  tikzset{/thing/.cd,
                  pie/.code=thing@cheesetruedefthing@cheese{#1}, %<-pretend you didn't see that
                  pie/.default=pink!70!red}
                  makeatother
                  begin{document}
                  begin{tikzpicture}[font=sffamily]
                  marmot[pie,whiskers,teeth,shadow]
                  node[anchor=east,scale=5,transform shape] at (-0.6,1) {$picdotmathsf{e}=text{sffamily pie}$};
                  end{tikzpicture}
                  end{document}


                  enter image description here






                  share











                  share


                  share










                  answered 7 mins ago









                  marmotmarmot

                  108k5132248




                  108k5132248






























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