Measure the radius of a circle. For example, supposed the radius of a circle is 10 cm.
Multiply the measured radius value by two:
10 cm x 2 = 20 cm
Observe that the calculation in Step 2 also gives the diameter of the circle, as the diameter is equal to two times the radius. Therefore, the diameter can be measured instead of measuring the radius and multiplying by two. Both procedures will result in the same circumference value.
Multiply the diameter's value by the mathematical constant pi to determine the circumference. For the most part, the circumference is expressed as the value multiplied by pi and not actually multiplying by the constant. For instance, the circumference in the example would normally be reported as 20pi cm. The value of pi, however, is routinely estimated as 3.14 if an approximation is needed:
Circumference = 2*pi*radius or diameter*pi
In the example, a circle with a diameter of 20 cm would have a circumference of 62.8 cm.