A triangle? Three lines that intersect in three points.
A triangle.
- If you're working on a single sheet of paper (2-D), then you can draw four lines that intersect in 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, or 6 points. - If in 3-D space, then you can also draw four lines that don't intersect at all.
Assuming that the none of the lines are parallel, they can intersect (pairwise) at three points. Otherwise, the question is tautological.
it's impossible if the line is straight but if u can make it zig-zag then you can make them intersect at as many points as you like.
3Num3
No, they can intersect at infinitely many points.
In space with 3 or more dimensions, there are infinitely many pairs of lines that are not parallel and do not intersect.
There is an infinite number of lines.
Concurrent lines
28 points. Each added line n intersects (n-1) other lines. 7 + 6 + 5 + 4 + 3 + 2 +1 = 28 The formula is P = n(n-1)/2, which here is 8x7/2 = 28 It is possible to have any number of points between 28 and 1 if multiple lines intersect at the same point.
Line #1 ==> Y = x Line #2 ==> Y = x + 1 These two lines are parallel, have no points in common, and never intersect. (3 ways to say the same thing)