Abacus |
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An abacus is a counting frame, typically wooden with balls sliding on wires. It was first used before the adoption of the ten-digit Arabic numeral system and is still widely used by small merchants in China.
The Roman abacus contains seven long and seven shorter rods or bars, the former having four perforated beads running on them and the latter one. This figure of a Roman abacus is taken from an ancient monument:
The suanpan (算盤 or 筭盤 suan4 pan2) of the Chinese closely resembles the Roman abacus in its construction and use. As recently as the late 1960s, abacus arithmetics were still being taught in school (e.g. in Hong Kong). When hand held calculators became popular, nobody wanted to learn how to operate an abacus any more. In the early days of handheld calculators, news about abacus operators beating electronic calculator in arithmetics competitions in both speed and accuracy often appeared in the media. The main reason being that early calculators were often plagued by rounding and overflow errors. (Most handheld calculators can only handle 8 to 10 significant digits, the abacus is virtually limitless in precision.) Inexperienced operators might contribute to the loss too. But when calculators' functionality improved, everyone knew that the abacus could never compute complex functions (e.g. trignometry) faster than a calculator. The older generation (those who were born before the early 1950s) still used it for a while, but electronic calculators gradually displaced abacus in Hong Kong over the past four decades. As calculators became more affordable, abacus is hardly seen in Hong Kong nowadays. However, abacuses are still being used in China and Japan. The slide rules also suffered a similar demise. The Suan4-Pan2 is closely tied to the Chinese "Hua1 Ma3" numbering system. The Japanese eliminated one bead each from the upper and lower deck in each column of the Chinese abacus, because these beads are redundent. That makes the Japanese soroban (十露盤) more like the Roman abacus. The soroban is about 3 inches tall. The beans on a soroban are usually double cone shape. Many sources also mentioned use of abacus in ancient Mayan culture. The Mesoamerican abacus is closely tied to the base-20 Mayan numerals system. See also: slide rule, Napier's bones
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Other less well-known uses of this term include: Abacus architecture, Abacus logic |
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