In as few bytes as possible, your job is to write a program that outputs:
3.14
In celebration of a late Pi day of course! :)
Rules
You can do it anyway you like, but there are some restrictions.
- You may not use arithmetic operations anywhere in your program. This includes
+
,-
,*
,/
,%
,^
(exponentiation), etc... This also includes incrementing (usually++
), decrementing (--
), bitwise operations, and any built in functions that can be used as a replacement such assum()
,prod()
,mod()
,double()
,pow()
,sqrt()
,inc()
,dec()
, etc... (Author's discretion) - The digits
3
,1
, and4
may not appear anywhere in your code. - You may not use any predefined variables/constants that your language may have as a replacement for
3
,1
, and4
. (Author's discretion) - You may also not use any trigonometric functions such as
sin()
,cos()
,tan()
,arcsin()
,arccos()
,arctan()
,sinh()
,cosh()
,tanh()
, etc... (Author's discretion) - You may not use built-in or predefined values of Pi (or
3.14
). No web requests. - Your program cannot require input of any kind (besides running it).
3.14
is the only thing that you may output, it cannot be part of some longer/larger output..
Winner
The answer with the least amount of bytes on April 18th wins. Good luck!
Looking forward to clever answers from clever minds! Malbolge anyone? :P
^
is the exponentiation operator, not bitwise XOR operator. \$\endgroup\$