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  2. Hindu–Arabic numeral system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HinduArabic_numeral_system

    The HinduArabic system is designed for positional notation in a decimal system. In a more developed form, positional notation also uses a decimal marker (at first a mark over the ones digit but now more commonly a decimal point or a decimal comma which separates the ones place from the tenths place), and also a symbol for "these digits recur ad infinitum".

  3. History of the Hindu–Arabic numeral system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Hindu...

    The HinduArabic numeral system is a decimal place-value numeral system that uses a zero glyph as in "205". [1]Its glyphs are descended from the Indian Brahmi numerals.The full system emerged by the 8th to 9th centuries, and is first described outside India in Al-Khwarizmi's On the Calculation with Hindu Numerals (ca. 825), and second Al-Kindi's four-volume work On the Use of the Indian ...

  4. Arabic numerals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arabic_numerals

    The reception of Arabic numerals in the West was gradual and lukewarm, as other numeral systems circulated in addition to the older Roman numbers. As a discipline, the first to adopt Arabic numerals as part of their own writings were astronomers and astrologists, evidenced from manuscripts surviving from mid-12th-century Bavaria.

  5. History of ancient numeral systems - Wikipedia

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

    Numeral systems. Number systems have progressed from the use of fingers and tally marks, perhaps more than 40,000 years ago, to the use of sets of glyphs able to represent any conceivable number efficiently. The earliest known unambiguous notations for numbers emerged in Mesopotamia about 5000 or 6000 years ago.

  6. Liber Abaci - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liber_Abaci

    Liber Abaci was among the first Western books to describe the HinduArabic numeral system and to use symbols resembling modern "Arabic numerals". By addressing the applications of both commercial tradesmen and mathematicians, it promoted the superiority of the system, and the use of these glyphs. [2]

  7. History of mathematical notation - Wikipedia

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

    The HinduArabic numeral system and the rules for the use of its operations, in use throughout the world today, likely evolved over the course of the first millennium AD in India and was transmitted to the west via Islamic mathematics. [37] [38] A page from al-Khwārizmī's Algebra. Despite their name, Arabic numerals have roots in

  8. Brahmi numerals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brahmi_numerals

    It is the direct graphic ancestor of the modern HinduArabic numeral system. However, the Brahmi numeral system was conceptually distinct from these later systems, as it was a non- positional decimal system, and did not include zero. Later additions to the system included separate symbols for each multiple of 10 (e.g. 20, 30, and 40).

  9. Al-Khwarizmi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Khwarizmi

    Al-Khwarizmi's work on arithmetic was responsible for introducing the Arabic numerals, based on the HinduArabic numeral system developed in Indian mathematics, to the Western world. The term "algorithm" is derived from the algorism , the technique of performing arithmetic with Hindu-Arabic numerals developed by al-Khwārizmī.