It was invented by a mathematician named Pascal.
A Mathematician named Pythagorean. That is why it is called Pythagorean's theorem. For every right triangle, this theorem will be true.
A mathematician.A mathematician.A mathematician.A mathematician.
It was discovered first by a Persian Mathematician named Al-Karaji, then followed by numerous other people from places such as China.
Aryabhata was India's first ''satellite, ''named after a ancient Indian ''mathematician ''''''
It was invented by a mathematician named Pascal.
yes because it was mostly a book named after it. because of that book, people had to use a right triangle to solve the problem
A Mathematician named Pythagorean. That is why it is called Pythagorean's theorem. For every right triangle, this theorem will be true.
The pythagorean theorem is the equation used to find the hypotenuse or missing side in a right triangle. It is named after Pythagoras of Samos, a mathematician who lived in the 5th and 6th centuries BC.
A mathematician.A mathematician.A mathematician.A mathematician.
It was discovered first by a Persian Mathematician named Al-Karaji, then followed by numerous other people from places such as China.
Aryabhata was India's first ''satellite, ''named after a ancient Indian ''mathematician ''''''
Mainly for Eurocentric reasons. The triangle was well known more than 1800 years before Pascal. In Iran it is known as the Khayyam triangle (Omar Khayyam , 11-12 century); in China, it is known as Yang Hui's triangle after the Chinese mathematician from the 13th century.
it is a mathematician and a satellite named after him
Ms.Gary Lorence named the triangle a triangle
That's the Pythagorean Theorem", named for the ancient Greek mathematician Pythagoras.
That's life.Pascal's triangle is a geometric arrangement of the binomial coefficients in a triangle, named after the mathematician Blaise Pascal in much of the Western world, although other mathematicians studied it centuries before him in India, Persia, China, and Italy.In 1655, Blaise Pascal wrote a Traité du triangle arithmétique (Treatise on Arithmetical Triangle), in which he collected several results then known about the triangle, and employed them to solve problems in probability theory. The triangle was later named after Pascal by Pierre Raymond de Montmort (1708) and Abraham de Moivre (1730).