No one invented it,it was dicovered* and first used in the 14 hundreds.
According to D. E. Smith, _History of Mathematics_, the sign
originated in 15th-century manuscripts aso o
per c or p cfor “per cento” or “per hundred.” By the mid-17th century it was
o
per —-
oand later the “per” was dropped. Later it was tilted into what Smith
calls the “solidus form, %”, since “/” is called a solidus.I seem to recall somewhere reading that it was originally “numero per
cento” in Italian, which was written aso /
n / cusing the solidus for “per,” as in a fraction; the c closed up to form
a second o, while the n disappeared. I can’t think what book that could be from, if not from Smith; but Smith apparently doesn’t agree.So this may just be a figment of my imagination.- Doctor Peterson, The Math Forum
Hmm, I guess that would explain it. Thak you good sir.
Tho I still say that this symbol looks stupid.
idishido liked this
mythic-swirl reblogged this from pewnythepony and added:
… how do you… discover… a symbol? It is something that had to have been created in either some language or mathematical...