Leonardo of Pisa, also known as Fibonacci.
1. Fibonacci's full name was Leonardo Pisano Bogolla, although he is also called Leonardo of Pisa, Leonardo Pisano, Leonardo Bonacci, or Leonardo Fibonacci.2. He is considered one of the best mathematicians of his time.3. He spread the Arabic numeral system to Europe when he published Liber Abaci in the early 1200's AD. If he hadn't done that, we might still be doing math using Roman numerals!4. He was born about 1170 AD, the son of an Italian merchant named Guglielmo Fibonacci.5. He did not discover the Fibonacci Sequence, although he did use it as an example in his book, the Liber Abaci.
Leonardo F. Napolitano has written: 'Egosofia' -- subject(s): Moral education, Social problems
the fibonacci pattern of numbers came round about in the 1980's
The Fibonacci sequence, was first known by the ancient people of India. When Fibonacci travelled there in the 1200's he learnt it from them and then passed on his learning to the rest of Europe through his book, Liber Abaci.
Fibonacci was born in 1170 and died in the 1240's he now has a memorial next to the Leaning Tower of Pisa
Yehoshua Perl has written: 'Deficient generalized Fibonacci maximum path graphs' -- subject(s): Data processing, Fibonacci numbers, Graph theory
Caterina
It certainly did not. When experts scrutinized Leonardo,s sketchbooks in our days, the little bike-like sketch was discovered. Many experts believe it is a late addition by somebody else.
N.N Vorobev has written: 'The Fibonacci numbers' -- subject(s): Fibonacci numbers
Yes Leonardo did invent the scissors... -Taylor D. S. Age:11
The sequence S = 2, 2, 4, 6, 10, 16, 26, ... is the Fibonacci sequence multiplied by 2. Like the Fibonacci sequence, each term is found by adding the two previous terms, so Sn = Sn-1 + Sn-2.