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The new horizontal forms eventually transformed into Suzhou numerals.
The other indigenous system is the Suzhou numerals, or huama, a positional system.
Suzhou numerals are a variation of the Southern Song rod numerals.
The Suzhou numerals are variants of rod numerals.
They were primarily used along with Suzhou numerals for economic records: taxes, business transactions, crop and fishery yields, and the like.
In Chinese numerals, a circle (〇) is used to write zero in Suzhou numerals.
Suzhou numerals were used as shorthand in number-intensive areas of commerce such as accounting and bookkeeping.
The Suzhou numerals or huama is a numeral system used in China before the introduction of Arabic numerals.
The number 4 of Kharosthi numerals in ancient India is somewhat similar to number 4 of Suzhou numerals.
After Qing dynasty, both the Chinese numeral characters and the Suzhou numerals were replaced by Arabic numerals in mathematical writings.
Another example is the Suzhou numerals, which is a form of scientific notation that requires the number to be laid out in a 2-D form consisting of at least two rows.
Suzhou numerals were once popular in Chinese marketplaces, such as those in Hong Kong along with local transportation before the 1990s, but they have gradually been supplanted by Arabic numerals.
The "graphical characters" actually comprise punctuation marks, partial punctuation marks (e.g., half of a dash, half of an ellipsis; see below), dingbats, foreign characters, and other special characters (e.g., presentational "full width" forms, digits for Suzhou numerals, zhuyin fuhao, etc.)