citrus
Point A has coordinates (x,y). Point B (Point A rotated 270°) has coordinates (y,-x). Point C (horizontal image of Point B) has coordinates (-y,-x).
They are its coordinates in the Cartesian plane.
The midpoint B on line segment AC is the point that divides the segment into two equal lengths. To find the coordinates of B, you can use the midpoint formula: B = ((x₁ + x₂)/2, (y₁ + y₂)/2), where (x₁, y₁) are the coordinates of point A and (x₂, y₂) are the coordinates of point C. This point B represents the average of the coordinates of points A and C.
If the coordinates of the end points are (a,b) and (c,d) then the midpoint is the point whose coordinates are [(a+c)/2, (b+d)/2]
To determine the coordinates of point D in trapezium ABCD, we need the coordinates of points A, B, and C, as well as the requirement that one pair of opposite sides (either AB and CD or AD and BC) are parallel. If AB is parallel to CD, then the y-coordinates of points A and B must equal the y-coordinates of points C and D, respectively. Alternatively, if AD is parallel to BC, then the x-coordinates of A and D must equal the x-coordinates of B and C. Please provide the specific coordinates of points A, B, and C for a precise answer.
The slope of a line and the coordinates of a point on the line.The slope of a line and the coordinates of a point on the line.The slope of a line and the coordinates of a point on the line.The slope of a line and the coordinates of a point on the line.
To dilate the point ( c(93) ) by a scale factor of 3 using the origin as the center of dilation, you multiply the coordinates of the point by 3. If ( c(93) ) refers to the point ( (9, 3) ), the transformed coordinates would be ( (9 \times 3, 3 \times 3) = (27, 9) ). Therefore, the transformed point after the dilation is ( c(27, 9) ).
The coordinates of a point are in reference to the origin, the point with coordinates (0,0). The existence (or otherwise) of an angle are irrelevant.
In coordinate geometry, each point in the plane is identified by an ordered pair, (x,y) which are known as the coordinates of the point. The equation of any straight line in the coordinate plane can be written in the form y = mx + c so that the coordinates of each point on the line satisfies this equation (and the coordinates of a point outside the line doed not satisfies it). The equation in this form is known as the slope-intercept form. m is the slope and c is the intercept.
A point has coordinates; an angle does not.
To find the coordinates of point A after being dilated by a factor of 3, you multiply the original coordinates (x, y) of point A by 3. For example, if point A has coordinates (2, 4), the new coordinates after dilation would be (2 * 3, 4 * 3) or (6, 12). Thus, the coordinates of point A after dilation depend on its original position.
oh my goodness not even dr.sheldon cooper can answer that