only two points are required to form a line .One is the starting point and other is the end point
i think you have to put both of the points onto the line
no, they make a line segment.
I have no idea, I'm asking you! I think the answer is two! EDIT: It is 2.
no just jocking
I think the question you mean to ask is, "Do three collinear points make a triangle?" Linear is simply the adjective form of "line", "collinear" is used to describe points that lie on the same line. (Two points not only can be collinear, but always are, so it makes little sense to describe them as such).Collinear points cannot make a triangle, a triangle requires three noncollinear points.
2 points
2
any points along the line described by the equation x=anything will give you a vertical line on a graph
A line segment in geometry is a distinctive line that has end points.
A line is not made up of points for the very reason that points have no dimension. It is absolutely impossible for things with no dimension, so matter how many are added, to ever equal something of one dimension. It is easy to think of points as dots. Dots, however, are only representations of points to help us visualize pints. Although many dots added together can make a line, points cannot.
It takes three points to make a plane. The points need to be non-co-linear. These three points define a distinct plane, but the plane can be made up of an infinite set of points.
One line only. This is because by definition a line only needs two points. Three points not in a line would make a plane when connected. Two points, when connected, form a line in which there is only one way to pass through points a and b.