yes
aryabhatta,the ancient Indian scientist and mathematician was the first inventor ofzero
The first real zero came from an Indian mathematician named Aryabhatta .
One main Indian innovation that is used throughout the world is the number zero. Indian mathematicians were the first to recognise and use zero as a real number. About 500BCE Indian scholar Pingala used the sanskrit word śūnya to represent zero. In 498CE Aryabhata developed a ten digit decimal notation system that is the basis of our 0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9, system today.
Question Hour comes first [11 am]. Then by noon Zero Hour begins.
The number zero has always existed. Most historians believe that zero was first described by Indian mathematicians around 600 bce
In 7th century AD
bhojdev inscription, gwalior
The symbol zero originated from the Indian sub-continent and was also used by the ancient Mayans but in a different form.
It was the 7th century Indian mathematician Brahmagupta who first treated zero as a number in its own right and not merely as a placeholder.
It means zero.
aryabhatta
I can't comment on anything to do with computers or their invention, but I believe the zero was of Arabic origin, not Indian. but i personally think thhat the zero as we are useing it today was first recorded in indian civilisation. and the records state that it was done by aryabhata