Ready reckoner

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The Ready-Reckoner, or Farmer’s Complete Table; Aberystwyth, 19th century

A ready reckoner is a reference book or page that presents commonly used calculations alongside their corresponding results, enabling rapid retrieval of answers. They were extensively employed in retail and by tradespeople prior to the widespread availability of inexpensive electronic calculators, the adoption of metric weights and measures and the introduction of decimalized currencies in the 1970s.

Before the 1960s and the widespread introduction of calculators, multiplication was a laborious chore, often prone to error. This was especially so when calculations involved non-decimal currencies or weights and measures.[1] Various devices were invented to aid this process, such as the abacus, log tables, slide rule, stepped reckoner, or the comptometer, but the most commonly used device for everyday commerce was the ready reckoner. These could be either general-purpose – aimed to meet the needs of a variety of trades – or designed specifically for one trade or group of trades.

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