Machin-like formula
In 1706, William Jones published a contribution from John Machin of the first 100 decimal digits of the circle constant π = 3.14159..., at that time a record for accuracy, along with the unexplained and surprising formula used to calculate them,
This formula is an expanded form of the equation now called Machin's formula,
where the arctangents of and have been expanded using the arctangent series,
When applied directly to find , the arctangent series converges extremely slowly, requiring five billion terms to obtain 10 correct decimal digits. Machin's formula is dramatically more practical, needing only six terms to obtain 10 correct digits.
Several other well-known mathematicians immediately set to work making sense of Machin's formula, developing their own variants and extensions, now in general called Machin-like formulas. These have the form
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where is a positive integer, are signed non-zero integers, and and are positive integers such that .