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In school, many years ago, my teacher taught me about a mathematician who was working on developing tables (or something similar to that). He apparently worked for years and then made a single mistake in his calculations. Consequently, the remaining work he did on these tables, which spanned additional years, was inaccurate. I tried looking him up recently but can't find any information in a general search of the internet. Does anyone know who this mathematician was?

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    This sounds like the computation of $\pi$ by William Shanks to $707$ places, but there was a mistake that resulted in only the first $527$ being correct. That nevertheless was the record number of digits at the time. See the Chronology of computation of $\pi$ for more details. Actually several previous attempts turned out to be similarly flawed. – hardmath Sep 09 '17 at 23:01
  • I wonder where that Wikipedia page's figure "Took 15 years to calculate" comes from - it's not in the cited "The Quest for Pi" article – Dap Sep 09 '17 at 23:04
  • @Dap: His St. Andrews biography has some surrounding details, esp. concerning his collaboration with William Rutherford. – hardmath Sep 09 '17 at 23:13
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    I hope that neither your teacher nor you are planning to use this story to scoff: Shanks's error in calculating the decimal expansion of $\pi$ led to more errors in the same calculation. It did not make all his later mathematical work useless. – Rob Arthan Sep 09 '17 at 23:14

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William Shanks is probably who they meant

Dap
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