Pilish
Pilish is a style of constrained writing in which the lengths of consecutive words match the digits of the number π (pi). The shortest example is the three letter word “hit”.
Examples[]
The following sentence is an example which matches the first fifteen digits of π:
How I need a drink, alcoholic in nature, after the heavy lectures involving quantum mechanics!
The following Pilish poem (written by ) matches the first 31 digits of π:
- But a time I spent wandering in bloomy night;
- Yon tower, tinkling chimewise, loftily opportune.
- Out, up, and together came sudden to Sunday rite,
- The one solemnly off to correct plenilune.
A full-length Pilish novel has been published,[1] which currently holds the record of the longest Pilish text with 10,000 digits.
Rule sets[]
In order to deal with occurrences of the digit zero, the following rule set was introduced (referred to as Basic Pilish):
- In Basic Pilish, each word of n letters represents
- (1) The digit n if n < 10
- (2) The digit 0 if n = 10
Since long runs of small non-zero digits are difficult to deal with naturally (such as 1121 or 1111211), another rule set called Standard Pilish was introduced:
- In Standard Pilish, each word of n letters represents
- (1) The digit n if n < 10
- (2) The digit 0 if n = 10
- (3) Two consecutive digits if n > 10
- (for example, a 12-letter word, such as "sleepwalking," represents the digits 1,2)[citation needed]
See also[]
References[]
- ^ Keith, Michael (2010). Not A Wake. Vinculum Press. ISBN 0-9630097-1-0.
External links[]
- Constrained writing
- Pi