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  2. Keisan Game - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keisan_Game

    Touching the wrong number answer will instantly cost a life. Climbing to the top of the building results in more math questions being asked. The other challenges result in having to control a race car as it navigates through a complex labyrinth. Players must find the exit tile while avoiding rival drivers in order to access the next math question.

  3. Grid method multiplication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grid_method_multiplication

    While not normally taught as a standard method for multiplying fractions, the grid method can readily be applied to simple cases where it is easier to find a product by breaking it down. For example, the calculation 2 ⁠ 1 / 2 ⁠ × 1 ⁠ 1 / 2 ⁠ can be set out using the grid method

  4. Mutilated chessboard problem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mutilated_chessboard_problem

    The mutilated chessboard problem is an instance of domino tiling of grids and polyominoes, also known as "dimer models", a general class of problems whose study in statistical mechanics dates to the work of Ralph H. Fowler and George Stanley Rushbrooke in 1937. [1]

  5. Eternity puzzle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eternity_puzzle

    An empty Eternity board. The Eternity puzzle is a tiling puzzle created by Christopher Monckton and launched by the Ertl Company in June 1999. It was marketed as being practically unsolvable, with a £1 million prize on offer for whoever could solve it within four years.

  6. Cuisenaire rods - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuisenaire_rods

    Cuisenaire rods illustrating the factors of ten A demonstration the first pair of amicable numbers, (220,284). Cuisenaire rods are mathematics learning aids for pupils that provide an interactive, hands-on [1] way to explore mathematics and learn mathematical concepts, such as the four basic arithmetical operations, working with fractions and finding divisors.

  7. Algebra tile - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Algebra_tile

    An example of multiplying binomials is (2x+1)×(x+2) and the first step the student would take is set up two positive x tiles and one positive unit tile to represent the length of a rectangle and then one would take one positive x tile and two positive unit tiles to represent the width. These two lines of tiles would create a space that looks ...

  8. Pythagorean tiling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pythagorean_tiling

    A Pythagorean tiling Street Musicians at the Door, Jacob Ochtervelt, 1665.As observed by Nelsen [1] the floor tiles in this painting are set in the Pythagorean tiling. A Pythagorean tiling or two squares tessellation is a tiling of a Euclidean plane by squares of two different sizes, in which each square touches four squares of the other size on its four sides.

  9. Tiling with rectangles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiling_with_rectangles

    A tiling with rectangles is a tiling which uses rectangles as its parts. The domino tilings are tilings with rectangles of 1 × 2 side ratio. The tilings with straight polyominoes of shapes such as 1 × 3, 1 × 4 and tilings with polyominoes of shapes such as 2 × 3 fall also into this category.