Roman to Arabic IN108, 12:303:30p'm' Class Project Michelle Edmondson - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Roman to Arabic IN108, 12:303:30p'm' Class Project Michelle Edmondson

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Michelle Edmondson -Mohamed Irshard Fahim -Chathuranga Sampath Kuruppuarachchige -Thomas L Phillips -Sandesh Shrestha. Roman Letters: M = 1000. D = 500. C = 100. L ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Roman to Arabic IN108, 12:303:30p'm' Class Project Michelle Edmondson


1
Roman to Arabic-IN-108, 1230-330p.m.-Class
Project-Michelle Edmondson
  • -Mohamed Irshard Fahim
  • -Chathuranga Sampath Kuruppuarachchige
  • -Thomas L Phillips
  • -Sandesh Shrestha

2
Roman Letters
  • M 1000
  • D 500
  • C 100
  • L 50
  • X 10
  • V 5
  • I 1

3
USAGE HISTORY
  • In general, Roman numerals can be converted
    mathematically by simply assigning a numerical
    value to each letter, and adding them left to
    right in order of decreasing value to get the
    total
  • the total is then calculated by adding the
    numerical values of all the letters in the
    sequence. For example, MDCLXVI 1000 500 100
    50 10 5 1 1666.

4
  • A well-known, but still often confusing feature
    of modern Roman numerals is the subtraction
    principle, which requires that a lower numeral
    appearing before a higher one be subtracted from
    the higher value, not added to the total. For
    example, XIX represents the number 19 (X IX, or
    10 9) rather than 21, which is written as XXI
    (10 10 1). Likewise the Roman numeral for the
    year 1995 is usually written as MCMXCV (M CM
    XC V, or 1000 900 90 5).

5
  • Another present-day convention is the avoidance
    of more than three consecutive occurrences of the
    same letter in favor of the more succinct forms
    achieved by using the subtraction principle --
    for example, IV for IIII (4), XL for XXXX (40),
    and CD for CCCC (400). An exception is the
    numeral M, or 1000, which is used 4 times to
    represent our number 4000, since the Romans had
    no single-letter numeral representing a higher
    value than M. It is now also customary not to
    repeat the values V, L, or D (5, 50, or 500) in
    the same numeral.

6
WELCOME SPLASH SCREEN
7
MESSAGE BOX
8
ROMAN NUMERAL CONVERTER
9
CODING THE CONVERT BUTTON
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END SPLASH SCREEN
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CREDITS
  • Christopher Handy. http//204.120.164.5/charta/Ro
    man_numerals.html
  • THE END
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