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Zero and Place-Value — Build an Abacus and Count Like the World Does
Mark

创建者

Mark

2. 七月 2026FI
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Zero and Place-Value — Build an Abacus and Count Like the World Does

A hands-on maths project: thread beads into a simple abacus and discover place-value -- how the position of a digit gives its size, and why zero (an empty column) changed the world. A Python cell shows the same idea in the binary of computers, and a compendium traces zero from India to your pocket.
初学者
30 minutes

说明

1

The most important nothing

For most of history there was no zero. Around 628 AD the Indian mathematician Brahmagupta made zero a real number and gave the decimal place-value system its rules. You will build a counting machine that shows how it works.
2

Make a bead abacus

Make a small frame from card and thread three or four rows of beads across it (or just lay out rows of beads in columns on the table). Label the columns from the right: ones, tens, hundreds, thousands. Each column is worth ten times the one to its right.

此步骤所需材料:

Cardstock Assorted Pack (50 sheets)Cardstock Assorted Pack (50 sheets)1
Glass BeadsGlass Beads1
Cotton Kitchen StringCotton Kitchen String1

所需工具:

Sharp ScissorsSharp Scissors
3

Count in place-value

Show the number 305: put 3 beads in the hundreds column, NONE in the tens, and 5 in the ones. The empty tens column is the job of zero -- without it, 35 and 305 would look the same. Practise a few numbers, sliding beads and reading them off. Try adding by sliding beads and 'carrying' to the next column when one fills up.
4

The same idea in binary

Loading Jupyter Notebook...

所需工具:

Desktop ComputerDesktop Computer
5

Compendium: how nothing changed everything

What your abacus teaches. (1) In a place-value system a digit's value depends on its COLUMN, each worth ten times the next -- so just ten symbols (0-9) can write any number, however large. (2) Zero does two jobs: it holds an empty column so the others line up, AND it is a number you can calculate with. (3) Roman numerals had neither, which is why calculating with them was so painful -- try multiplying MDCCC by anything. (4) The same positional trick, cut down to just 0 and 1, is how every computer on Earth counts; and zero went on to anchor algebra, coordinates and calculus. It is hard to name a more powerful nothing.

材料

3

所需工具

2

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