His manuscript on astrolabes Traite de l'astrolabe or Vite presentis indutias silentio, a copy of which is in Paris served as a source for European astronomers in the Medieval period.
The texts, originally of unknown authorship, were noted by Pierre Duhem in 1915 and in the 1920s by Lynn Thorndike and Charles Homer Haskins.
The Paris manuscript which is the most complete version was found by Emmanuel Poulle in 1954.
Another work was the first volume of Opera omnia which included Liber cursuum planetarum.
[1] In 1972 another text, Liber judiciorum, on astrology was discovered by Marie-Thérèse d’Alverny.