Pascal had the idea to invent the calculator while observing and aiding his father's official work as supervisor of taxes at Rouen. He saw what a strenuous and complicated it was to do the math, so he decided to make a device that would simplify the process.
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Pascaline
Yes. 1645/5 = 329
The Roman numeral MDCXLV represents the number 1645.
35 x 47 = 1645
Yes. 1,645 / 5 = 329
the calculator
nose
Pascaline
Pascaline
Pascaline
1642 - 1645
No, the very first mechanical calculators could only add and subtract. The first mechanical calculators were invented in 1623 by Wilhelm Schickard, followed by the Pascaline, invented in 1645 by Blaise Pascal. However, calculators that could multiply and divide were in use by the 19th century.
Blaise Pascal worked on the calculator for three years between 1642 and 1645. This calculator, called the Pascaline, was like a mechanical calculator of the 1940s. He created it to help his father with tax collecting.However, the first calculators were abaci, and were often constructed as a wooden frame with beads sliding on wires. Abacuses were used centuries before the adoption of the written Arabic numerals system and are still used by some merchants, fishermen and clerks in China and elsewhere.The first mechanical calculator was made by Blaise Pascal of France, called the Pascaline, in 1642.The first calculators were abacus frames. These go back to earlier than 2000 bc. Names and details are unavailable; they have been long lost. The slide rule was invented by W. Oughtred in 1632. The first mechanical adder dates to about 1650 by Blaise Pascal in France. The first practical adder/lister was patented in 1885 by William Burroughs of Rochester, New York. The first hand held calculator was invented by Jack Kilby, Jerry Merryman, and James Van Tassel in 1966 at Texas Instruments.
in 1645
it was in 1645
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