MarketEastern Arabic numerals
Company Profile

Eastern Arabic numerals

The Eastern Arabic numerals, also called Indo-Arabic numerals, or Arabic–Indic numerals, as known by Unicode, are the symbols used to represent numerical digits in conjunction with the Arabic alphabet in the countries of the Mashriq and the Arabian Peninsula, and the variants in other countries that use the Persian numerals on the Iranian plateau and in Asia.

Origin
The numeral system originates from an ancient Indian numeral system, which was reintroduced during the Islamic Golden Age in the book On the Calculation with Hindic Numerals written by the Persian mathematician and engineer al-Khwarizmi, whose name was Latinized as Algoritmi. == Other names ==
Other names
These numbers are known as () or () in Arabic. They are sometimes also called Indic numerals or Arabic–Indic numerals in English. However, that is sometimes discouraged as it can lead to confusion with Indian numerals, used in Brahmic scripts of the Indian subcontinent. == Numerals ==
Numerals
Each numeral in the Persian variant has a different Unicode point even if it looks identical to the Eastern Arabic numeral counterpart. However, the variants used with Urdu, Sindhi, and other Languages of South Asia are not encoded separately from the Persian variants. '' style (٢٣-->) differently from Naskh (٢٣). Written numerals are arranged with their lowest-value digit to the right, with higher value positions added to the left. That is identical to the arrangement used for Western Arabic numerals, even though Arabic script is read from right-to-left. Columns of numbers are usually arranged with the decimal points aligned. In Arabic, negative signs are written to the right of magnitudes, e.g. (−3). In Persian, they are written to the left, e.g. −۳. In-line fractions are written with the numerator on the left and the denominator on the right of the fraction slash, e.g. (). The Arabic decimal separator (U+066B) or the comma is used as the decimal mark, as in (3.14159265358). The Arabic thousands separator (U+066C) or quote or Arabic comma (U+060C) may be used as a thousands separator, e.g. (1,000,000,000). == Contemporary use ==
Contemporary use
, which reads "82N712-11" Eastern Arabic numerals are in predominant use over Western Arabic numerals in many countries to the east of the Arab world, notably Iran and Afghanistan. In Arabic-speaking Asia, as well as Egypt and Sudan, both types of numerals are in use (and are often employed alongside each other), though Western Arabic numerals are increasingly used, including in Saudi Arabia. The United Arab Emirates uses both Eastern and Western Arabic numerals. In Pakistan, Western Arabic numerals are more extensively used digitally. Eastern numerals continue to see use in Urdu publications and newspapers, as well as signboards. In the Maghreb, only Western Arabic numerals are commonly used. In medieval times, these areas used a slightly different set (from which, via Italy, Western Arabic numerals derive). The Thaana writing system used for the Maldivian language adopted its first nine letters (haa, shaviyani, noonu, raa, baa, lhaviyani, kaafu, alifu, and vaavu) from Perso-Arabic digits. == See also ==
tickerdossier.comtickerdossier.substack.com