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Inspired by Ibn Musa AlKhawarizmi (AlKhawarizmi)

Some of book written by him are based on Indian Sinhind

The Compendious book on Calculation by Completing and Balancing ( concept on balancing and reduction)

Al -Jabr is divided into six chapters, each of which deals with a different type of formula.

The first chapter of Al-Jabr (ax 2 = bx), The second chapter (ax 2 = c) The third (bx = c), The fourth chapter (ax 2 + bx = c), The fifth chapter (ax 2 + c = bx), The sixth chapter (bx + c = ax 2 )

Abd al- Hamd ibn Turk

manuscript entitled Logical Necessities in Mixed Equations geometric demonstration as is found in Al- Jabr proof that if the discriminant is negative then the quadratic equation has no solution

Egyptian mathematician Ab Kmil Shuj ibn Aslam

the first to accept irrational numbers as solutions to quadratic equations or as coefficients in an equation. solve three non-linear simultaneous equations with three unknown variables

Al-Karkhi (9531029), also known as AlKaraji

discovered the first numerical solution to equations of the form ax 2n + bx n = c. the first person to free algebra from geometrical operations

Another key event in the further development of algebra was the general algebraic solution of the cubic and quartic equations, developed in the mid-16th century. The symbol x commonly denotes an unknown variable. Even though any letter can be used, x is the most common choice. This usage can be traced back to the Arabic word ay ' = thing, used in Arabic algebra texts such as the Al-Jabr , and was taken into Old Spanish with the pronunciation ei , which was written xei , and was soon habitually abbreviated to x .

Japanese mathematician Kowa Seki in the 17th century (idea of a determinant )

Gottfried Leibniz ten years later (the purpose of solving systems of simultaneous linear equations using matrices)

Gabriel Cramer also did some work on matrices and determinants in the 18th century.

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