01932nam 2200373Ia 450 99638677190331620200824132234.0(CKB)4940000000082351(EEBO)2240849861(OCoLC)ocm16263527e(OCoLC)16263527(EXLCZ)99494000000008235119870722d1688 uy |engurbn||||a|bb|The description and use of the carpenters-rule[electronic resource] together with The use of the line of numbers commonly called Gunters-line : applyed to the measuring of all superficies and solids, as board, glass, plaistering, wainscoat, tyling, paving, flooring, &c., timber, stone, square on round, gauging of vessels, &c. : also military orders, simple and compound interest, and tables of reduction, with the way of working by arithmatick in most of them : together with the use of the glasiers and Mr. White's sliding-rules, rendred plain and easie for ordinary capacities /by John BrownLondon Printed for W. Fisher and R. Mount ...1688[205] p., [1] leaf of plates illSpecial t.p. (p. [169]): The use of the line of numbers on a sliding (or glasiers) rule in arithmatick & geometry ... / first drawn by Mr. White ; ... made easie and useful by John Brown. London printed : [s.n.], 1688.Imperfect: some pages tightly bound, with slight loss of print.Reproduction of original in the Huntington Library.eebo-0113MensurationEarly works to 1800Mathematical instrumentsMensurationMathematical instruments.Brown Johnphilomath.396957EAHEAHWaOLNBOOK996386771903316The description and use of the carpenters-rule2298849UNISA