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  2. Tally marks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tally_marks

    However, the box tally and dot-and-dash tally characters were not accepted for encoding, and only the five ideographic tally marks (正 scheme) and two Western tally digits were added to the Unicode Standard in the Counting Rod Numerals block in Unicode version 11.0 (June 2018). Only the tally marks for the numbers 1 and 5 are encoded, and ...

  3. Counting Rod Numerals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Counting_Rod_Numerals...

    There are also two characters for use in representing traditional European tally marks (only Tally Mark One and Tally Mark Five are encoded, with tally numbers two through four intended to be represented as a sequence of two through four Tally Mark One characters).

  4. History of mathematical notation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_mathematical...

    Written mathematics began with numbers expressed as tally marks, with each tally representing a single unit. Numerical symbols consisted probably of strokes or notches cut in wood or stone, which were intelligible across cultures. For example, one notch in a bone represented one animal, person, or object.

  5. Numeral system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Numeral_system

    Tally marks represent one such system still in common use. The unary system is only useful for small numbers, although it plays an important role in theoretical computer science. Elias gamma coding, which is commonly used in data compression, expresses arbitrary-sized numbers by using unary to indicate the length of a binary numeral.

  6. History of ancient numeral systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_ancient_numeral...

    In the Etruscan system, the symbol 1 was a single vertical mark, the symbol 10 was two perpendicularly crossed tally marks, and the symbol 100 was three crossed tally marks (similar in form to a modern asterisk *); while 5 (an inverted V shape) and 50 (an inverted V split by a single vertical mark) were perhaps derived from the lower halves of ...

  7. Talk:Hatch mark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Hatch_mark

    Comment: Tally marks are not also called hatch marks. However, hatch marks can be thought of as using tally marks. The two are not interchangable. One contains the other. The current quote is like saying cube roots are also called radical signs. Radical signs are a symbol used in cube roots, but cube roots are not radical signs.

  8. Mathematical notation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mathematical_notation

    The tally stick is a way of counting dating back to the Upper Paleolithic. Perhaps the oldest known mathematical texts are those of ancient Sumer . The Census Quipu of the Andes and the Ishango Bone from Africa both used the tally mark method of accounting for numerical concepts.

  9. Counting rods - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Counting_rods

    In Japan, mathematicians put counting rods on a counting board, a sheet of cloth with grids, and used only vertical forms relying on the grids. An 18th-century Japanese mathematics book has a checker counting board diagram, with the order of magnitude symbols "千百十一分厘毛" (thousand, hundred, ten, unit, tenth, hundredth, thousandth).