TIL Pizza is a cylinder
30 0 ReplyIt’s a very flat cylinder, but a cylinder nevertheless.
45 0 ReplyCylinders prefer to be called thicc circles.
15 0 ReplyLike a round toast with stuff on it
4 0 ReplyLet's face it, pizza is an open face sandwich.
5 0 Reply
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1 0 Reply
Except the mathematical variable name for radius is r. Also for a cylinder you use the term height, not thickness. Which is called h in math. So by all accounts it should be called Pirrh.
Edit: Also also, with this logic you could've just called a pizza "Volume". Would've saved you a lot of time :/
25 2 ReplyNo no, I have heard better excuses than that. Now if you'll excuse me, I'm gonna have a slice of Volume now thank you very much.
3 0 Reply
I prefer Taurh
3 0 Reply
Pizza gets better as "a" approaches zero.
15 1 ReplyBut if
a = 0
thenPiZZa = PiZZ * 0 = 0
9 0 ReplyBut it's approaching zero. It never becomes zero. 😙👌
12 0 Reply
One molecule-thin crust pizza coming up!
8 0 ReplyOne molecule is thick af, with no extra Cs. Sexy Limits don't stop just because our feeble reality has size limits.
5 0 Reply
Thin crust + thin toppings.
4 0 ReplyExtremely wrong. The ideal A:Z ratio is more like 1:4.
4 1 ReplyThat's just a bread loaf with cheese on top
2 0 Reply
The a is for altura, which is height in Spanish and therefore probably also in Italian
13 0 ReplyIn Italian it's "altezza" but in this case the better word is "spessore" which means thickness
4 0 ReplyPizza's thicc
1 0 Reply
Here I thought it was because of Personal Investigator Z.Z. Andersen
11 0 ReplyThis is the absolute ONLY case where it's acceptable to call a pizza a pie. That being said, well done to the memesmith 😀
7 0 ReplyBut- and hear me out- what if you are a stereotypical Italian chef with a big mustache and a chef's hat and you send it out to the customer? You gotta say, "at's-a good pizza pie!"
5 0 ReplyGood point, but I'm actually not that. I'm starting to suspect that very few people actually are!
5 0 Reply
A deep dish pizza and a calzone are both technically pies as far as I can tell. They have a surrounding casing of crust. A flat pizza would not be a pie.
4 0 ReplyA deep dish pizza and a calzone are both technically pies as far as I can tell. They have a surrounding casing of crust. A flat pizza would not be a pie.
Agreed. This guy pies.
4 0 Reply
This is the absolute ONLY case where it’s acceptable to call a pizza a pie.
Never had deep dish, I take it?
4 0 ReplyThat's not really pizza OR pie..
4 0 ReplyNot OP, but I never have, and not sure if I can get any in my area, but I would like to try it some day.
2 0 Reply
The parenthesis are pointless. Exponents go first, but multiplication doesn't care about order, and there is only multiplication going on.
6 1 ReplyThey could be used to separate two letter symbol (Pi) from one letter symbol (Z, Z, a)
3 0 ReplyThe parentheses are for clarification and thus not pointless. Know your audience. 🙂👍
2 0 ReplyClarification of what? The joke doesn't need them and neither does the math.
1 0 Reply
pi of Pie (with ZZ toppings) is meme squared
5 0 ReplyIt would be 2PiZA, since ZZ is Z squared
EDIT: my bad, I was thinking of circumference
8 3 ReplyWat? It is supposed to be squared though...
6 0 ReplyThat would be the surface area of the crust, not the volume
4 0 ReplyHow does that work out? It doesn't take into account how large the crust is in relation to the rest of the pizza.
1 0 Reply
2 Pizza? That's even better.
3 0 ReplyIt's a 2-for-1 deal! Like Little Caesar's! Pizza pizza.
3 0 Reply
Haha I love this
3 0 Replythat’s cool, but did you know that you can get more pizza if you order two mediums instead of a single large?
4 1 Replythat's insane 😮 did you know that you can get more pizza if you order 2 large pizzas instead of 2 mediums?
7 0 Replywoaaah you've just changed my life. does the same go for small > medium? I wonder if two smalls are also bigger than two larges
3 0 Reply
Did you know two mediums cost more than a single large?
5 0 ReplyI’d say that depends entirely on whether their diameter is larger than half of that of the large pizza.
1 1 ReplyWhoa whoa whoa tho... Did you know that if you got three large pizzas it's more than 4 mediums?
4 0 Reply
Isn't the Z axis vertical?
4 1 ReplyNot in bistromath.
26 0 ReplyIndeed, a common mistake for newcomers to the field.
6 0 Reply
It's typically vertical, but you can name your variables however you want.
14 1 ReplyThe Z axis is usually used for depth, so it's going to be perpendicular to whatever your frame of reference (i.e. projection plane) is.
If it's upright in space, like a computer screen, the Z axis will be horizontal. If it's a sheet of paper on a desk, then yes, I suppose it could be argued to be vertical instead.
4 0 Reply
in lots of 3D software Z is horizontal
6 0 ReplyHorizontal going into the screen right? The depth axis, if you will.
1 0 ReplyAll the 3D printer software, Z is vertical. But I only used a couple so I am not an expert.
2 1 Reply
I've definitely seen Z as the forward/backward axis before
3 0 ReplyNo? That would be the y axis.
1 0 Reply
(☞゚ヮ゚)☞
2 0 Reply🍕←( ̄︶ ̄)>
2 0 Reply
This is genius.
1 0 Replythe z should be lower case
2 0 ReplyYeah Z is the set of integers. Or a random variable. Or something. I dunno, it's been a while.
1 0 Reply