The oldest known use of a large dot as zero was in 683 CE. It is not clear when the dot was hollowed out to a 0.
The Romans had no symbol for zero but medieval monks, writing in Latin introduced the symbol N to represent the Latin word Nullae (meaning nothing).
yes it was 0
The Romans had no symbol for the value zero (0) because they did not need one in their system. However during the middle ages monks, who still used Latin and Roman numerals, introduced the symbol N (from the Latin Nullae, meaning nothing) to represent zero.
The zero symbol of 0 originated from the Indian subcontinent.
The Romans had no numeral for zero. But later, during the middle ages, monks who still wrote in Latin and used Roman numerals introduced the symbol N (representing the Latin word Nullae) for zero.
No because the 0 symbol originated from the Indian subcontinent but he may have improved on the usefulness of the zero symbol.
The symbol is a ')' which is a closing parenthesis.Parentheses are the opening and closing symbols '( )'.
The invention of the zero symbol originated from the Indian sub-continent.
A superscript 0 (zero) and a capital "C". 0C
The Romans had no numeral for the value zero, so '0' could not be represented by a numeral. However in the middle ages monks, who still used Roman numerals and wrote in Latin, introduced the numeral N (from the Latin Nulae, meaning nothing) to represent zero.
The representation of 0 in Roman numerals is not applicable as the Romans did not have a symbol for zero in their numerical system.
Each half of the symbol 8 looks like a 0