thuck continuous line
lines used to indicate all visible edges of an object
There are twp perpendicular edges in a triangular prism. See if you draw a triangle you'll have two angles or edges that are the same length. That is if you draw a standard triangle.
Draw the note-heads in two desired pitches and color them. Draw stems as you draw for quarter notes. Draw a beam joining the two edges of the stems.
Neons draw very little current. This allows for small charges to be visible, before the charge disappears.
Because the edges are not curved so if you were to draw it it should go straight
Visible lines are lines that are drawn in a technical drawing to represent the edges or outlines of an object that can be seen in the finished product. Invisible lines, on the other hand, are used to represent features that are hidden from view or are behind other objects in the drawing.
There are nine. Cause, there are 3 vertical and 6 horizontal.
A group of points that extend forever in all directions is called a plane. We often draw a plane with edges, but it really has no edges.
A triangle has 3 edges and 3 corners. Depending on what kind of triangle it is decides what angles they are. Hope this helped a little. :) (You can always draw a picture that always helps me)
The only way to draw a plane that captures EXACTLY two edges is by having it run through edges that are diagonally opposite. Trying to draw a plane that captures any other pair results in either capturing more edges (if you pick lines that intersect, or are parallel to each other, you wind up drawing a plane that captures the entire edge of the cube, which obviously contains all 4 edges on that side), and if you pick two edges that are skew, there is no plane that will capture them both. So, how many pairs of diagonally opposite edges are there? Well, there are 12 edges total, so 6 pairs.
None. A can't even see the rectangular solid!
To draw the projection of the pentagonal prism, first draw the base which is a regular pentagon with 25mm sides. Then, extend the sides of the pentagon upwards by 60mm to represent the height of the prism. Next, draw the perspective view by projecting lines from the corners of the base to the corresponding corners on the top pentagon. Finally, draw the visible edges connecting the top and bottom pentagons to complete the projection of the pentagonal prism with the axis parallel to the vertical plane (vp).