When point P lies outside of the line segment AB, it can divide AB externally as shown in this diagram:The formulas for external division are as follows:
Yes it can
You can't find the midpoint of a general line as a general line is infinitely long. However you can find the midpoint of a Pacific line between two points add up the x values divide by 2. Add up the y values divide by 2. That is the coordinate of the midpoint of a Pacific line.
divide the line segment in half to aquire the center point
Substitute the coordinates of the point into the equation of the line. If the result is true, then the point is on the line.
divide by the gradient
The midpoint of a line can be found easily by using the midpoint formula. Find the length of the line and simply divide it in two.
It is the exact point in the middle of the line segment. Add the 'x' values together , and divide by 2 ,and then add the 'y' values and divide by 2. This will give you the median of a line segment.
Point begin B, point end E (unknown) known point on line A compute vector BA, norm it (divide by its norm) then multiply the normed vector by the length of the line ; this vector BE. From there, get coord of E
Bisect a segment is to divide the line segment into 2
Unless the line is a subset of the plane, the intersection is a point.
graph it