Works even better for squares ending in 5 because you'll round up and down to multiples of ten which means the number ends in 00 and you'll always be adding 25.
When I heard about this trick it was referred to as vedic, hindu or indian math, but I don't know if that's actually historically/geographically accurate or not. There's some Japanese nintendo DS games that aim to train you in it, I think it was a bit of a craze over there.
When I heard about this trick it was referred to as vedic, hindu or indian math, but I don't know if that's actually historically/geographically accurate or not.
That is not historically accurate, as several authors in India have pointed out. Let me see if I can find a citation:
While those are fun, IIRC (and I've spent some time with both) neither of them do large multiplication, and I'm quite confident neither of them try to teach this technique to you; they just present math problems with no technique. (Memorization is appropriate for anything up to 12x12 or 15x15 anyhow, and if they exceed that it's not by much.)
I think the latter might be the same as the Korean title, Indian Math Brain DS.
For those that don't want to import stuff that they probably can't read (though I find you can usually get by) there's also Make 10: a journey of numbers which is a weird maths based adventure game, kind of Brain Age meets WarioWare:
So:
When I heard about this trick it was referred to as vedic, hindu or indian math, but I don't know if that's actually historically/geographically accurate or not. There's some Japanese nintendo DS games that aim to train you in it, I think it was a bit of a craze over there.