Lattice multiplication

Lattice multiplication, also known as gelusia multiplication, sieve multiplication, shabakh, Venetian squares, or the Hindu lattice, is a method of multiplication that uses a lattice to multiply two multi-digit numbers. It is mathematically identical to the more commonly used long multiplication algorithm, but it breaks the process into smaller steps, which some practitioners find easier to use.[1]

The method had already arisen by medieval times, and has been used for centuries in many different cultures. It is still being taught in certain curricula today.[2][3]

Gelosia Muliplication A grid is drawn up, and each cell is split diagonally. The two multiplicands of the product to be calculated are written along the top and right side (with highest digits on top) of the lattice, respectively, with one digit per column across the top for the first multiplicand (highest digits left), and one digit per row down the right side for the second multiplicand (highest digits on top). Then each cell of the lattice is filled in with product of its column and row digit.

As an example, let's consider the multiplication of 58 with 213. After writing the multiplicands on the sides, consider each cell, beginning with the top left cell. In this case, the column digit is 5 and the row digit is 2. Write their product, 10, in the cell, with the digit 1 above the diagonal and the digit 0 below the diagonal (see picture for Step 1).

If the simple product lacks a digit in the tens place, simply fill in the tens place with a 0.[1]

After all the cells are filled in this manner, the digits in each diagonal are summed, working from the bottom right diagonal to the top left. Each diagonal sum is written where the diagonal ends. If the sum contains more than one digit, the value of the tens place is carried into the next diagonal (see Step 2).

Numbers are filled to the left and to the bottom of the grid, and the answer is the numbers read off down (on the left) and across (on the bottom).

Multiplication of Decimals

The lattice technique can also be used to multiply decimal fractions. For instance, to multiply 5.8 by 2.13, a vertical line could be drawn straight down from the decimal in 5.8, and a horizontal line straight out from the decimal in 2.13. The lines are extended until they intersect, at which point they merge and follow the diagonal . The positioning of this diagonal line in the final result is the location of the decimal point.[1]

History

Lattice multiplication has been used historically in many different cultures. It is not known where it arose first, nor whether it developed independently within more than one region of the world.[4] The earliest recorded use of lattice multiplication:[5]

The mathematician and educator David Eugene Smith asserted that lattice multiplication was brought to Italy from the Middle East.[6] This is reinforced by noting that the Arabic term for the method, shabakh, has the same meaning as the Italian term for the method, gelosia, namely, the metal grille or grating (lattice) for a window.

It is sometimes erroneously stated that lattice multiplication was described by Muḥammad ibn Mūsā al-Khwārizmī (Baghdad, c. 825) or by Fibonacci in his Liber Abaci (Italy, 1202, 1228).[7] In fact, however, no use of lattice multiplication by either of these two authors has been found. In Chapter 3 of his Liber Abaci, Fibonacci does describe a related technique of multiplication by what he termed quadrilatero in forma scacherii (“rectangle in the form of a chessboard”). In this technique, the square cells are not subdivided diagonally; only the lowest-order digit is written in each cell, while any higher-order digit must be remembered or recorded elsewhere and then "carried" to be added to the next cell. This is in contrast to lattice multiplication, a distinctive feature of which is that the each cell of the rectangle has its own correct place for the carry digit; this also implies that the cells can be filled in any order desired. Swetz [8] compares and contrasts multiplication by gelosia (lattice), by scacherii (chessboard), and other tableau methods.

Other notable historical uses of lattice multiplication include:[5]

Derivations

Derivations of this method also appeared in the 16th century in Matrakci Nasuh's Umdet-ul Hisab.[9] Matrakçı Nasuh's triangular version of the multiplication technique is seen in the example showing 155 x 525 on the right, and explained in the example showing 236 x 175 on the left figure.[10]

The same principle described by Matrakci Nasuh underlay the later development of the calculating rods known as Napier's bones (Scotland, 1617) and Genaille–Lucas rulers (France, late 1800s).

References

  1. 1 2 3 Thomas, Vicki (2005). "Lattice Multiplication". Learn NC. UNC School of Education. Retrieved 4 July 2014.
  2. Boag, Elizabeth, “Lattice Multiplication,” BSHM Bulletin: Journal of the British Society for the History of Mathematics 22:3 (Nov. 2007), p. 182.
  3. Nugent, Patricia M., “Lattice Multiplication in a Preservice Classroom”, Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School 13:2 (Sept. 2007), pp. 110-113.
  4. Jean-Luc Chabert, ed., A History of Algorithms: From the Pebble to the Microchip (Berlin: Springer, 1999), p. 21.
  5. 1 2 Jean-Luc Chabert, ed., A History of Algorithms: From the Pebble to the Microchip (Berlin: Springer, 1999), pp. 21-26.
  6. Smith, David Eugene, History of Mathematics, Vol. 2, “Special Topics of Elementary Mathematics” (New York: Dover, 1968).
  7. The original 1202 version of Liber Abaci is lost. The 1228 version was later published in its original Latin in Boncompagni, Baldassarre, Scritti di Leonardo Pisano, vol. 1 (Rome: Tipografia delle Scienze Matematiche e Fisiche, 1857); an English translation of the same was published by Sigler, Laurence E., Fibonacci’s Liber Abaci: A Translation into Modern English of Leonardo Pisano’s Book of Calculation (New York: Springer Verlag, 2002).
  8. Swetz, Frank J., Capitalism and Arithmetic: The New Math of the 15th Century, Including the Full Text of the Treviso Arithmetic of 1478, Translated by David Eugene Smith (La Salle, IL: Open Court, 1987), pp. 205-209.
  9. Corlu, M.S., Burlbaw, L.M., Capraro, R. M., Corlu, M.A.,& Han, S. (2010). "The Ottoman Palace School Enderun and The Man with Multiple Talents, Matrakçı Nasuh." Journal of the Korea Society of Mathematical Education, Series D: Research in Mathematical Education. 14(1), p 19-31.
  10. http://tamu.academia.edu/SencerCorlu/Papers/471488/The_Ottoman_Palace_School_Enderun_and_the_Man_with_Multiple_Talents_Matrakci_Nasuh
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