President James Garfield was one famous person who proved it.
They were shocked.
Chinese and babylonians
yes former pres. jamrs garfield proved it .
some guy named pythygoras, a bunch of other people invented it wayyy earlier
When people talk about thoerems they are usually refering to the pythagorean theorem which is, a(squared)+b(sqaured)=c(squared)
Pythagoras was an ancient Greek mathematician whose theorem was: any right angle triangle, when its hypotenuse is squared, is equal to the sum of its squared sides. discovery of a mathematical formula to relate the sides of a right triangle
It's difficult to quantify exactly how many people have heard about the Pythagorean theorem, but it is widely taught in schools around the world, making it familiar to millions. The theorem is a fundamental principle in mathematics, particularly in geometry, and is often introduced in middle or high school curricula. Consequently, a significant portion of the global population, including students, educators, and those with an interest in mathematics, are likely aware of it.
Pythagoras biggest impact on people today was the Pythagorean Theorem. Some other things he has influenced people with are the discovery that music notes could be used in mathematical problems, he devising the tetractys, and which is a triangular figure of four rows
it has progressed by making more aggressive pop/rock songs that people all around will love.
-It was made by Pythagoreas, but was discovered earlier in Asian countries, esp. China -It only has to do with right angle triangles -It leads into trig functions and is the basis of trigonometry -It is used commonly nowadays -People earlier used this to prove that not all numbers are rational!
Pythagoras created the Pythagorean theorem which deals with the 3 sides of a triangle (a2+b2=c2). It says that the square of the hypotenuse is equal to the square of the other two sides of the trinangle. Pythagoras established a people in southeastern Italy called the Pythagoreans and their motto is "All is number".
it depends what textbook you have. basically it's ratio, proportion, division of fractions, the pythagorean theorem, surface area, volume, compound and simple interest, markup and selling prices, formulas, simplifying exponential expressions, and so on. there's a lot more but this is some from the Foundations for Algebra series. Hope this helps!