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the roman numerals and the Hindu Arabic are the 2 basic types of number systems but we use the Hindu Arabic
They don't have curved lines
having infinity numbers
Hindu Arabic Numerals use numbers but Roman numerals use symbols.
A nought figure.
Hindu-Arabic numbers are like 1,2,3,4,5 and on Roman numbers are different letters represent number like i is 1 v is 5 and x is 10
Not really, they are entirely different systems for writing numbers. We are used to seeing Roman Numerals starting at the left with large values and going to the right with small values (similar to Hindu/Arabic) but this is just an "accident" that the Roman Numerals were usually copied off an abacus or sand board left to right. The letters could actually be scrambled in any order and the number was still the same. The romans would have read both "VI" and "IV" as the number 6 (the use of "IV" as the number 4 was a shorthand modification by monks in the middle ages, long after the Roman Empire was gone).
Both are decimal based:Hindu: 1, 10, 100, 1000, 10 000, 100 000, 1 000 000, 10 000 000 ..........Roman: I, X, C, M, (X), (C), (M), (M)X ..........Both are written down in descending order:Hindu: 321Roman: CCCXXIBoth use superscripts:Hindu: 5*105 = 500 000Roman: MD = 500 000Note that the Roman superscripts indicates multiplication rather than exponential powers of a number as in the case of the Hindu system. So MD would indicate M*D (1000*500 = 500 000).The biggest advantage that the Hindu system has over the Roman system is the 0 figure which indicates positional place value.
The Roman numeral XXIX represents the number 29
Roman numerals were the number system of the ancient Romans. Hindu-Arabic numerals are the digits we use for composing numbers nowadays.
If you are referring to the Roman number, that is equivalent to 100.
Hindu Arabic is the number we use like 1,2,3,4........ Roman numbers are the numbers Romans were using like I,II,III,IV,V.........Improved Answer:The main difference between Hindu-Arabic numerals and Roman numerals is the absence of a nought figure in the Roman numeral system.