The variant of magic square in Javanese tradition

Bibliographic Details
Format: Restricted Document
_version_ 1860799991224729600
building INTELEK Repository
collection Online Access
collectionurl https://intelek.unisza.edu.my/intelek/pages/search.php?search=!collection407072
date 2021-09-27 02:17:37
eventvenue Virtual, Online
format Restricted Document
id 8214
institution UniSZA
originalfilename 4174-01-FH03-FIK-21-56561.pdf
person Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML
like Gecko) Chrome/93.0.4577.82 Safari/537.36
recordtype oai_dc
resourceurl https://intelek.unisza.edu.my/intelek/pages/view.php?ref=8214
spelling 8214 https://intelek.unisza.edu.my/intelek/pages/view.php?ref=8214 https://intelek.unisza.edu.my/intelek/pages/search.php?search=!collection407072 Restricted Document Conference Conference Paper application/pdf 4 1.6 Adobe Acrobat Pro DC 20 Paper Capture Plug-in Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML like Gecko) Chrome/93.0.4577.82 Safari/537.36 2021-09-27 02:17:37 4174-01-FH03-FIK-21-56561.pdf UniSZA Private Access The variant of magic square in Javanese tradition Normal magic square is a square composed of consecutive natural numbers starting at 1 and each number appears exactly once, and the number of elements in each row, column, and diagonal is the same. Examples of normal magic squares are Lo-Shu, Agrippa, Duhrer and Khajuraho magic squares. In Javanese tradition, a magic square is also found. The existence of this magic square is found in a book that collects Javanese knowledge, called primbon. The elements contained in the magic square in the primbon are written in Arabic numerals and Arabic characters (Hijaiyah). The numerical value of the magic square can be determined because each Arabic character is assigned a specific numeric value. This research was conducted with a literature study. The objectives of this research are describe some of the magic squares by order 4 that found in the primbon (book of Javanese knowledge) used by the Javanese who inhabit the Java Island in Indonesia, and produces some theorems about magic square that found in primbon. In my research, we obtain a variation of the magic square in the Javanese tradition. From this variation we come up with several lemmas, theorems and conjectures. 11th Annual International Conference on Industrial Engineering and Operations Management Virtual, Online
spellingShingle The variant of magic square in Javanese tradition
summary Normal magic square is a square composed of consecutive natural numbers starting at 1 and each number appears exactly once, and the number of elements in each row, column, and diagonal is the same. Examples of normal magic squares are Lo-Shu, Agrippa, Duhrer and Khajuraho magic squares. In Javanese tradition, a magic square is also found. The existence of this magic square is found in a book that collects Javanese knowledge, called primbon. The elements contained in the magic square in the primbon are written in Arabic numerals and Arabic characters (Hijaiyah). The numerical value of the magic square can be determined because each Arabic character is assigned a specific numeric value. This research was conducted with a literature study. The objectives of this research are describe some of the magic squares by order 4 that found in the primbon (book of Javanese knowledge) used by the Javanese who inhabit the Java Island in Indonesia, and produces some theorems about magic square that found in primbon. In my research, we obtain a variation of the magic square in the Javanese tradition. From this variation we come up with several lemmas, theorems and conjectures.
title The variant of magic square in Javanese tradition
title_full The variant of magic square in Javanese tradition
title_fullStr The variant of magic square in Javanese tradition
title_full_unstemmed The variant of magic square in Javanese tradition
title_short The variant of magic square in Javanese tradition
title_sort variant of magic square in javanese tradition