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Charles Haros was a
geometer A geometer is a mathematician whose area of study is geometry. Some notable geometers and their main fields of work, chronologically listed, are: 1000 BCE to 1 BCE * Baudhayana (fl. c. 800 BC) – Euclidean geometry, geometric algebra * ...
(
mathematician A mathematician is someone who uses an extensive knowledge of mathematics in their work, typically to solve mathematical problems. Mathematicians are concerned with numbers, data, quantity, structure, space, models, and change. History On ...
) in the French Bureau du Cadastre at the end of the eighteenth century and the beginning of the nineteenth century.


Haros' conversion table

One of the primary tasks of the Bureau du Cadastre was the accurate
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ping of
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for the purpose of
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but from time to time the bureau also provided computational services to other parts of the government. One of the changes instituted by the
French revolution The French Revolution ( ) was a period of radical political and societal change in France that began with the Estates General of 1789 and ended with the formation of the French Consulate in coup of 18 Brumaire, November 1799. Many of its ...
was to convert France to the
metric system The metric system is a system of measurement that succeeded the decimalised system based on the metre that had been introduced in France in the 1790s. The historical development of these systems culminated in the definition of the Interna ...
and this necessitated changing from a fractional to a decimal representation of
rational numbers In mathematics, a rational number is a number that can be expressed as the quotient or fraction of two integers, a numerator and a non-zero denominator . For example, is a rational number, as is every integer (e.g. ). The set of all rat ...
. While Haros was involved many computation projects at the Bureau du Cadastre including the computation of de Prony’s tables of
logarithms In mathematics, the logarithm is the inverse function to exponentiation. That means the logarithm of a number  to the base  is the exponent to which must be raised, to produce . For example, since , the ''logarithm base'' 10 of ...
and the preparation of the French ephemeris,
Connaissance des Temps The ''Connaissance des temps'' (English: Knowledge of the Times) is an official yearly publication of astronomical ephemerides in France. Until just after the French Revolution, the title appeared as ''Connoissance des temps'', and for several ye ...
, he is best known for a small table he prepared to convert fractions to their decimal equivalents. Haros’ conversion table appeared in a tract, ''Instruction Abrégée sur les nouvelles Mesures qui dovient étre introduites dans toute république, au vendémiaire an 10; avec tables de rapports et reductions'', that was presented to the Mathematics Section of the
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and subsequently abstracted in Journal de l'École Polytechnique under the title "Tables pour évaluer une fraction ordinaire avec autant de decimals qu’on voudra; et pour trouver la fraction ordinaire la plus simple, et qui approche sensiblement d’une fraction décimale." In preparing his table, Haros needed to create the list of all 3,003 irreducible (vulgar) fractions with denominators less than 100. In order to make sure he got them all he harnessed an
algorithm In mathematics and computer science, an algorithm () is a finite sequence of rigorous instructions, typically used to solve a class of specific problems or to perform a computation. Algorithms are used as specifications for performing ...
elucidated by
Nicolas Chuquet Nicolas Chuquet (; born ; died ) was a French mathematician. He invented his own notation for algebraic concepts and exponentiation. He may have been the first mathematician to recognize zero and negative numbers as exponents. In 1475, Jehan A ...
some one-hundred and fifty years earlier. Chuquet called it his "règle des nombres moyens". Today, we call it the mediant. The mediant is the fraction between two fractions a/c and b/d whose
numerator A fraction (from la, fractus, "broken") represents a part of a whole or, more generally, any number of equal parts. When spoken in everyday English, a fraction describes how many parts of a certain size there are, for example, one-half, eight ...
is the sum of the numerators, a+b, and whose
denominator A fraction (from la, fractus, "broken") represents a part of a whole or, more generally, any number of equal parts. When spoken in everyday English, a fraction describes how many parts of a certain size there are, for example, one-half, eight ...
is the sum of the denominators, c+d. That is, the mediant of the fractions a/c and b/d is the fraction (a+b)/(c+d). In his paper Haros demonstrated that the mediant is always irreducible and, more importantly for this purposes, if one starts with the sequence of fractions :1/99, 1/98, 1/97, ..., 1/4, 1/3, 1/2, 2/3, 3/4, 5/6, ..., 96/97, 97/98, 98/99 and just keeps applying the rule, only keeping the result if the denominator is less than one-hundred, then they generate all 3,003.


A curious property

Roughly fifteen years later in
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, Henry Goodwyn set out to create a much more ambitious version of Haros’ table. In particular, Goodwyn wanted to tabulate the decimal values for all
irreducible fraction An irreducible fraction (or fraction in lowest terms, simplest form or reduced fraction) is a fraction in which the numerator and denominator are integers that have no other common divisors than 1 (and −1, when negative numbers are considered). I ...
s with denominators less than or equal to 1,024. There are 318,963 such fractions. As a warm up and a test of the commercial market for such a table in 1816 he published for private circulation The First Centenary of a Series of Concise and Useful Tables of all the Complete Decimal Quotients, which can arise from dividing a unit, or any whole Number less than each Divisor by all Integers from 1 to 1024. John Farey observed the mediant property in this table and mused in a letter to The
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and Journal as follows: :"I am not acquainted, whether this curious property of vulgar fractions has been before pointed out?; or whether it may admit of any easy or general demonstration ?; which are points on which I should be glad to learn the sentiments of some of your mathematical readers; ..."


(Mis)naming of the Farey sequence

Augustin Cauchy Baron Augustin-Louis Cauchy (, ; ; 21 August 178923 May 1857) was a French mathematician, engineer, and physicist who made pioneering contributions to several branches of mathematics, including mathematical analysis and continuum mechanics. He w ...
read Farey’s letter and published a paper "Démonstration d’un Théorème Curieux sur les Nombres" reproving Haros’ results without acknowledgement. In his paper Cauchy referred to the mediant as "a remarkable property of ordinary fractions observed by M. J. Farey." Thus, an ordered sequence of all vulgar fractions with denominators less than a given value became known as a
Farey sequence In mathematics, the Farey sequence of order ''n'' is the sequence of completely reduced fractions, either between 0 and 1, or without this restriction, which when in lowest terms have denominators less than or equal to ''n'', arranged in ord ...
rather than perhaps more rightfully as either a Chuquet sequence or a Haros sequence.


Publications

* Cauchy, Augustin Louis. "Démonstration d'un Théorème Curieux sur Les Nombres". ''Bulletin des Sciences, par la Société Philomatique de Paris'', Vol. 3, No. 3 (1816), pp. 133–135. * Farey, John. "On a Curious Property of Vulgar Fractions". ''The Philosophical Magazine and Journal'', Vol. 47, No. 3 (1816), pp. 385–386. * Goodwyn, Henry. ''The First Centenary of a Series of Concise and Useful Tables of all the Complete Decimal Quotients, which can arise from dividing a unit, or any whole Number less than each Divisor by all Integers from 1 to 1024'', Private Distribution, 18p, 1816. * Haros, Charles. ''Comptes faits à la manière de Darême, sur les nouveaux poids et measures, aves les pris proportionnels, à l’usage et autres''. Paris:Frimin Didot, 1806. * Haros, Charles. "Tables pour évaluer une fraction ordinaire avec autant de decimals qu’on voudra; et pour trouver la fraction ordinaire la plus simple, et qui approche sensiblement d’une fraction décimale". ''Journal de École Polytechnique'', Vol. 6, No. 11 (1801), pp. 364–368. * Haros, Charles. ''Instruction Abrégée sur les nouvelles Mesures qui dovient étre introduites dans toute république, au vendémiaire an 10; avec tables de rapports et reductions''. Paris:Firmin Didot, 1801.


See also

* Ivor Grattan-Guinness has written a number of books and papers on mathematics in France in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. *
Gaspard De Prony Baron Gaspard Clair François Marie Riche de Prony (22 July 1755 – 29 July 1839) was a French mathematician and engineer, who worked on hydraulics. He was born at Chamelet, Beaujolais, France and died in Asnières-sur-Seine, France. Educati ...
set up the Bureau du Cadastre and lead the project to compute the great logarithmic and trigonometric tables, the ''Tables du cadastre''


Further reading

* Guthery, Scott. ''A Motif of Mathematics: History and Application of the Mediant and the Farey Sequence''. Boston:Docent Press, 2010.


External links

* Mansuy, Roger. Les calculs du citoyen Haros. Les calculs du citoyen Haros. L’apprentissage du calcul décimal. http://www.dma.ens.fr/culturemath/ * Roegel, Denis. The great logarithmic and trigonometric tables of the French Cadastre: a preliminary investigation. http://www.loria.fr/~roegel/locomat.html. {{DEFAULTSORT:Haros, Charles History of mathematics Mathematical tables Mathematical series 18th-century French mathematicians 19th-century French mathematicians