Al-Khwarizmi, a Persian Muslim polymath, invented the concept of searching for the unknown, which serves as the fundamental basis of algebra.
This was actually developed in its modern GUI form by Xerox PARC on their Alto computer in 1973, but the basic concept had been in use on text based interactive editors for about a decade before that. Apple copied from Xerox PARC for use on their Lisa in 1983 and Macintosh in 1984.
It is one of their basic rights as citizens of America to build a masjid where ever they choose to. I see no problem with that.
no
These are all teachings of the Buddha (from India) and so are basic aspects of the Buddhist religion.
D.O.S. it is an operating system, it is the base for windows. That is incorrect. DOS was not their first product. Their first program was ALTAIR BASIC in 1975. DOS wouldn't come around until the release of the IBM PC in 1981.
the concept of the + sign. they also developed the concept of zero. and the+ sign
The inventions of the zero and the logarithms.
The inventions of the zero and the logarithms
The inventions of the zero and the logarithms
The inventions of the zero and the logarithms
Babylonians
AND, OR, and NOT are the basic operators in Boolean Algebra.
I think you mean Algebra 1 & 2 If you did, Algebra 1 is the basic stuff. Algebra 2, you get more complex, but it's still a basic idea.
A concept is a more developed and detailed understanding of a topic, while an idea is a more basic and general thought or suggestion.
Yes, you can move from basic Algebra to Geometry, but only upon recommendation from your teacher.
first we learn variables constants and basic algebra
My Teacher said in the begining of pre calculus it is baisically algebra 3 and geometry 2. pre calc algebra is more complicated than basic algebra. however pre calc uses that basic algebra in solving problems. so all in all, they are just different levels of algebra