Scalar contains only the magnitude but Vector contains the magnitude and direction.
Vector
A scalar is a magnitude that doesn't specify a direction. A vector is a magnitude where the direction is important and is specified.
Distance is a scalar. But displacement is a vector.
Since you can represent that with a single number, it isn't a vector - just a scalar.
vector
Vector is NOT a scalar. The two (vector and scalar) are different things. A vector is a quantity (measurement) in which a direction is important. A scalar is a quantity in which a direction is NOT important.
It is a measurement that doesn't have direction, such as distance. A vector has direction
No, it's a scalar measurement because it has magnitude only. A vector measurement has both a magnitude and a direction.
Vector
A scalar is a magnitude that doesn't specify a direction. A vector is a magnitude where the direction is important and is specified.
The measurement of 12 feet up is a scalar measurement. Scalars have magnitude but no direction. In this case, the magnitude is 12 feet, indicating the distance or height, but there is no direction specified.
Both the odometer and speedometer are scalar because a vector measurement needs a magnitude and direction. If you, for example, combined a compass and a odometer/speedometer, you'd have a vector.
A scalar has distance but no direction. A vector has distance and direction. "12 feet up" has distance (12 feet) and direction (up), so is a vector.
scalar lol
Any measurement for which only a magnitude is required, but not a direction. The opposite of a vector: a measurement for which a direction IS relevant.
A scalar times a vector is a vector.
vector