Difference between revisions of "Activities/Abacus"

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== Abacus ==
  
== Where to get Abacus ==
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Read at https://help.sugarlabs.org/abacus.html
  
[http://activities.sugarlabs.org/en-US/sugar/addon/4293/ Activity] | [http://git.sugarlabs.org/projects/abacus/repos/mainline Source]
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The source file has been moved to [https://github.com/godiard/help-activity/blob/master/source/abacus.rst GitHub]
 
 
== About Abacus ==
 
 
 
[[File:Abacus-icon.png]]
 
 
 
 
 
[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abacus Abacus] lets the learner explore different representations of numbers using different mechanical counting systems developed by the ancient Romans and Chinese. There are several different variants available for exploration: a [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suanpan suanpan], the traditional Chinese abacus with 2 beads on top and 5 beads below; a [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soroban soroban], the traditional Japanese abacus with 1 bead on top and 4 beads below; the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abacus#Russian_abacus schety], the traditional Russian abacus, with 10 beads per column, with the exception of one column with just 4 beads used for counting in fourths; and the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abacus#Native_American_abaci nepohualtzintzin], a Mayan abacus, 3 beads on top and 4 beads below (base 20).
 
 
 
<gallery>
 
 
 
File:Suanpan.png|suanpan (Chinese)
 
File:Soroban.png|soropan (Japanese)
 
File:Schety.png|schety (Russian)
 
File:Nepohualtzintzin.png|nepohualtzintzin (Mayan)
 
 
 
</gallery>
 
 
 
== How to use an abacus ==
 
 
 
=== Clear the abacus ===
 
 
 
Before you start an arithmetic operation, you need to "clear" the abacus. The upper beads should be positioned against the top of the frame and the lower beads should be positioned against the bottom of the frame. This is the default position for the abacus when you launch the activity. (Note that the schety does not have any upper beads. All of the beads in the schety should start in the down position.)
 
 
 
=== Reading the abacus ===
 
 
 
In each column, the bottom beads represent 1s and the top beads represent 5s. (The exception is the column in the schety with only 4 beads. These are 1/4 each.) So for each bead you raise up from the bottom in a column add 1 and for each bead you lower from the top in the same column, add 5.
 
 
 
The columns themselves represent decimal positions from right to left, e.g., 1s, 10s, 100s, 1000s, etc. (There are two exceptions: (1) the nepohualtzintzin uses base 20, e.g., 1s, 20s, 400s, 8000s, etc.; and (2) on the schety, the beads to the right of the column with just four beads are 0.1s, 0.01s, 0.001s, and 0.0001s.)
 
 
 
The current value is always displayed on the frame. Experiment and you will quickly learn to write and read numbers.
 
 
 
'''Examples:''' In the gallery below, several simple examples are shown. In the gallery of images above, the number 54321 is shown on each of the different abaci.
 
 
 
<gallery>
 
File:Abacus-1.png|1 bottom bead is up, corresponding to 1 unit
 
File:Abacus-5.png|1 top bead is down, corresponding to 5 units
 
File:Abacus-5b.png|5 bottom beads are up, also corresponding to 5 units
 
File:Abacus-6.png|1 bottom bead is up and 1 top bead is down, corresponding to 6 units
 
File:Abacus-10.png|5 bottom beads are up and 1 top bead is down, corresponding to 10 units (time to "carry" to the left)
 
File:Abacus-10x1.png|This 10 is equivalent to...
 
File:Abacus-1x10.png|... this 10
 
File:Abacus-54321.png|54321
 
</gallery>
 
 
 
'''Note:''' The display always assumes a fixed unit column, but you can override this choice.
 
 
 
=== Addition ===
 
 
 
To add, simply move in more beads to represent the number you are adding. There are two rules to follow: (1) whenever you have a total of 5 units or more on the bottom of a column, cancel out the 5 by sliding the beads back down and add a five to to the top; and (2) whenever you have a total of 10 units or more in a column, cancel out the 10 and add one unit to the column immediately to the left. (With the nepohualtzintzin, you work with 20 rather than 10.)
 
 
 
'''Example:''' 4+3+5+19+24=55
 
 
 
<gallery>
 
File:Abacus-plus-4.png|4
 
File:Abacus-plus-3.png|+3=7 (5–2=3)
 
File:Abacus-plus-5.png|+5=12
 
File:Abacus-12.png|carry 5s to next column
 
File:Abacus-plus-19.png|+19=31 (20-1=19)
 
File:Abacus-plus-24.png|+24=55
 
File:Abacus-55.png|4+3+5+19+24=55
 
</gallery>
 
 
 
=== Subtraction ===
 
 
 
Subtraction is the inverse of addition. Move out beads that correspond to the number you are subtracting. You can "borrow" from the column immediately to the left: subtracting one unit and adding 10 to the current column.
 
 
 
'''Example:''' 26–2–4–6–10=4
 
 
 
<gallery>
 
File:Abacus-26.png|26
 
File:Abacus-minus-2.png|–2=24
 
File:Abacus-minus-4.png|–4=20
 
File:Abacus-carry-10.png|carry 10 to the right
 
File:Abacus-minus-6.png|–6=14
 
File:Abacus-minus-10.png|–10=4
 
</gallery>
 
 
 
=== Multiplication ===
 
 
 
There are several strategies for doing multiplication on an abacus. In the method used in the example below, the multiplier is stored on the far left of the abacus and the multiplicand is offset to the left by the number of digits in the multiplier. The red ''indicator'' is used to help keep track of where we are in the process.
 
 
 
<gallery>
 
File:Abacus-486x24.png|486×24=? Begin by placing 24 in the left-most columns and 486 offset from the far right by two columns (since 24 has two digits). Set the indicator to the right of the multiplicand.
 
File:Abacus-4x6.png|Multiply the least-significant digits (LSD) of the multiplier (4) and multiplicand (6) and place the results (4×6=24) in the far right columns.
 
File:Abacus-2x6.png|Multiply the next digit in the multiplier (2, which corresponds to 2×10=20) and the LSD of the multiplicand (6) and add the results (2×6=12) on the right (advancing one column to the left to correspond to the power of the digit in the multiplier).
 
File:Abacus-100s.png|Move the indicator over one column to the left.
 
File:Abacus-4x8.png|Repeat for the next digit in the multiplicand (8): 4×8=32
 
File:Abacus-2x8.png|2×8=16
 
File:Abacus-1000s.png|Move the indicator over one column to the left.
 
File:Abacus-4x4.png|Repeat for the next digit in the multiplicand (4): 4×4=16
 
File:Abacus-2x4.png|2×4=8
 
File:Abacus-11664.png|Clear the multiplier from the left and view the result: 486×24=11664
 
</gallery>
 
 
 
=== Division ===
 
 
 
Simple division (by a single-digit number) is the inverse of multiplication. In the example below, the dividend is put on the left (leaving one column vacant for the quotient) and the divisor on the right.
 
 
 
<gallery>
 
File:Abacus-123456789-over-2.png|123456789÷2=? Place the dividend (123456789) on the left, leaving one blank column. Place the divisor (2) on the right.
 
File:Abacus-1-over-2.png|1÷2=0.5
 
File:Abacus-2-over-2.png|2÷2=1
 
File:Abacus-3-over-2.png|3÷2=1.5
 
File:Abacus-4-over-2.png|4÷2=2
 
File:Abacus-5-over-2.png|5÷2=2.5
 
File:Abacus-6-over-2.png|6÷2=3
 
File:Abacus-7-over-2.png|7÷2=3.5
 
File:Abacus-8-over-2.png|8÷2=4
 
File:Abacus-9-over-2.png|9÷2=4.5
 
</gallery>
 
 
 
'''TODO:''' Add instructions for long division.
 
 
 
[[Category:Activities]]
 

Latest revision as of 23:47, 14 June 2018

Abacus

Read at https://help.sugarlabs.org/abacus.html

The source file has been moved to GitHub