(3,0)
The x coordinate is the distance to the right (East) from the origin while the y coordinate is the distance up the page (North).
That should be plural: "Cartesian coordinates". That's the most common type of coordinate system, with coordinates that are usually at right angles to one another - for example (x, y), or (x, y, z).
Cartesian coordinates are plotted on the Cartesian plane which consist of a horizontal x axis number line and a vertical y axis number line whereas both axes are perpendicular to each other and meet at right angles at the point of origin whose coordinates are at (0, 0)
It is where the x and y axes intercept at right angles at the point of origin which is at (0, 0)
The y coordinate is the vertical number line on the Cartesian plane that intersects with the horizotal x coordinate number line at right angles at the point of origin whose coordinates are (0, 0)
It is the distance to the right of the origin, which is the point whose coordinates are (0,0).
The x and y axes on the Cartesian plane intersect each other at right angles at the point of origin whose coordinates are at (0, 0)
The x and y axes on the Cartesian plane intersect each other at right angles at the point of origin whose coordinates are at (0, 0)
They meet on the Cartesian plane at right angles at the point of the origin whose coordinates are (0, 0)
The x coordinate is the distance to the right (East) from the origin while the y coordinate is the distance up the page (North).
It is a plane surface with an origin and a pair of orthogonal axes. The location of any point in the plane is given by an ordered pair of coordinates: the abscissa (distance to the right of the origin) and the ordinate (distance in the vertical direction from the origin).
That should be plural: "Cartesian coordinates". That's the most common type of coordinate system, with coordinates that are usually at right angles to one another - for example (x, y), or (x, y, z).
Cartesian coordinates are plotted on the Cartesian plane which consist of a horizontal x axis number line and a vertical y axis number line whereas both axes are perpendicular to each other and meet at right angles at the point of origin whose coordinates are at (0, 0)
If you mean in a 2-dimensional plane, the two ways I know of are Cartesian coordinates and polar coordinates. In the Cartesian coordinate system, there are 2 perpendicular axes, a horizontal and vertical (usually these are label x and y respectively). In this system, position is given by the distance from the origin (the center of the grid where x and y = 0) in the x and y direction. For example, if a point is 3 units away from the origin in the horizontal direction and 1 unit in the vertical the direction, the point is at (3,1) ( the 3 is the x and the 1 is the y). In polar coordinates, the position of a point is given by its distance from the origin (r) and the angle the line r makes with the horizontal axis. This angle is positive in the counterclockwise direction from the right side horizontal axis.
The coordinates are (10, 5).
How about zero coordinates of (0, 0) whereas the x and y axes intercept each other at the point of origin at right angles on the Cartesian plane.
Those coordinates describe a single point in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming. It's not possible for a whole country to be right there, completely at one point.