To rotate a figure 180 degrees clockwise about the origin you need to take all of the coordinates of the figure and change the sign of the x-coordinates to the opposite sign(positive to negative or negative to positive). You then do the same with the y-coordinates and plot the resulting coordinates to get your rotated figure.
You dont, its just 90 degrees 3 times..
Move it 3 times* * * * *or once in the anti-clockwise direction.
rotate it 90 degrees
I dont really know if this is right but i think to do this problem you have to take a point then rotate the paper counter clockwise around the origin then you have a new point which is called a prime. Then reflect it over the y axis on the graph.
Switch the x and y coordinates and multiply the first first coordinate (the new x coordinate) by -1
You dont, its just 90 degrees 3 times..
Move it 3 times* * * * *or once in the anti-clockwise direction.
No, only their positions will change.
To rotate a figure 90 degrees clockwise about the origin, simply swap the x and y coordinates of each point and then negate the new y-coordinate. This is equivalent to reflecting the figure over the line y = x and then over the y-axis.
To rotate a figure 180 degrees clockwise, you can achieve this by first reflecting the figure over the y-axis and then reflecting it over the x-axis. This double reflection effectively rotates the figure 180 degrees clockwise around the origin.
multiply the coordinates by -1.
rotate it 90 degrees
360 degree rotation (clockwise or anticlockwise) leaves any figure in exactly the same position as it was at the start. So YOU DO NOTHING.
I dont really know if this is right but i think to do this problem you have to take a point then rotate the paper counter clockwise around the origin then you have a new point which is called a prime. Then reflect it over the y axis on the graph.
Visualize a capital "N." Rotated 90 degrees counter-clockwise (a quarter turn to the left) it would look like a capital "Z."
The x,y origin is 0,0
The same as 180 degrees clockwise. What do you mean "the answer to"?