Konverter tal til og fra romertal
Numbers above 3,999 use vinculum notation: a line above a numeral multiplies its value by 1,000.
So CMXCIXCMXCIXDCXCVIII = 999 999 698.
Did you know?
The Printing Press Killed Roman Numerals
What finally ended Roman numerals in everyday use wasn't better math — it was Gutenberg. Typesetting Hindu-Arabic numerals was easier: ten compact characters vs. seven letters in elaborate combinations. Books, contracts, and ledgers all switched. By 1500, the debate was over.
Read more →Fibonacci's Sales Pitch
Fibonacci didn't invent Hindu-Arabic numerals — they originated in India around 500 AD. But his 1202 book Liber Abaci was essentially a 600-page argument that these new numbers were better for business. He showed European merchants how place value and zero could transform trade and banking. He was right. By 1500, the debate was over.
Read more →Hvor stammer romertal fra?
Man mener, at romertal stammer fra håndsignaler og tællestreger. Stregen I repræsenterer en finger, V repræsenterer åbningen mellem tommelfinger og fingre for fem, og X repræsenterer krydsede hænder for ti. Bogstaverne L, C, D og M stammer fra ændringer af græske bogstaver som chi, theta og phi til at repræsentere 50, 100, 500 og 1.000. Over tid blev disse mærker til de latinske bogstaver, folk kender i dag. Der er ingen 0 i det romerske alfabet, da begrebet tallet 0 først blev fuldt udviklet, efter at Indien opfandt det omkring 600 e.Kr. / 10600 HE.