a mechanical adding machine.
Blaise Pascal's mechanical calculating machine was called the Pascaline.
It was called Pascaline which was named after Blaise Pascal
Blaise Pascal
he achived the Arithmetic Machine.
blaise pascal
in 1642
blaise pascal
Blaise Pascal invented pathway questions.
In 1642 Blaise Pascal who was both a mathematician and a philosopher invented a very basic adding machine
The ancient Romans developed an Abacus. Blaise Pascal, however, was a French mathematical genius, and at the age of 19, he invented a machine, called the Pascaline, that could do addition and subtraction. He invented this machine to help his father, who was also a mathematician.
Blaise Pascal's calculating machine was called the "Pascaline." Developed in the 1640s, it was one of the earliest mechanical calculators designed to perform addition and subtraction. The Pascaline consisted of a series of gears and was aimed at helping his father, who was a tax collector, with calculations.
Pierre Gassendi and Clyde Mydorge were two mathematicians that Blaise Pascal stayed in contact with. Their services were especially important when Pascal was in the process of creating the adding machine.