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https://math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/How_do_you_convert_degrees_to_radians_not_in_terms_of_pi

How do you convert degrees to radians not in terms of pi? - Answers

Without pi, you can never represent the conversion exactly. If you use 57.296, that gets you within 0.001% of the truth, which is usually acceptable. If you use 57.3 instead, you're off by about 0.007% ... also not too shabby. Radians = approximately (degrees / 57.296) Degrees = approximately (radians x 57.296)



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How do you convert degrees to radians not in terms of pi? - Answers

https://math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/How_do_you_convert_degrees_to_radians_not_in_terms_of_pi

Without pi, you can never represent the conversion exactly. If you use 57.296, that gets you within 0.001% of the truth, which is usually acceptable. If you use 57.3 instead, you're off by about 0.007% ... also not too shabby. Radians = approximately (degrees / 57.296) Degrees = approximately (radians x 57.296)



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https://math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/How_do_you_convert_degrees_to_radians_not_in_terms_of_pi

How do you convert degrees to radians not in terms of pi? - Answers

Without pi, you can never represent the conversion exactly. If you use 57.296, that gets you within 0.001% of the truth, which is usually acceptable. If you use 57.3 instead, you're off by about 0.007% ... also not too shabby. Radians = approximately (degrees / 57.296) Degrees = approximately (radians x 57.296)

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      Without pi, you can never represent the conversion exactly. If you use 57.296, that gets you within 0.001% of the truth, which is usually acceptable. If you use 57.3 instead, you're off by about 0.007% ... also not too shabby. Radians = approximately (degrees / 57.296) Degrees = approximately (radians x 57.296)
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