That is the nature of dimensions. For example, three one-dimensional lines can come together to make a triangle, which is 2 dimensional. Six rectangles, each one two dimensional, can come together to make a cuboid - a 3-dimensional shape.
Plane. A point has no dimension, a line has one dimension, and a plane has two dimensions.
a point on a line
True.
false
A dimension that exactly locates a reference point, reference line, or reference plane
false
It's true that a point has no dimensions. But a line has one dimension, not two. A plane has two dimensions, a solid has three, and that's about all that ordinary people can visualize.
A line has one dimension- length. This is evident if we compare a line to a point and a plane figure. A point has no dimension; it merely marks a location. A plane figure, such as a square, circle, or triangle, has two dimensions. They have both length and height. A line is between a point and a plane figure. It has length, but it does not have width. ------------------------ 1 dimension. Here is a comparison of dimensions: 0 (dimension): Point 1: Lines 2: Plane 3: Solid, space 4+: Hypersurfaces, hypercubes, Klein bottles
Line, Ray and segment
A line is a series of points extending infinitely in opposite directions. Because a single point has no dimension we get only one dimension when we line the points up.
A leader line is a thin line on a design or blueprint that is used to connect a dimension line with a particular area or point on the drawing.
Point : 0 dimensions (position only) Line: 1 dimension (length) Plane: 2 dimensions (length and width)