The solution set for a given equation is the set of all points such that their coordinates satisfy the equation.
The first graph consists of all points whose coordinates satisfy the first equation.The second graph consists of all points whose coordinates satisfy the second equation.The point of intersection lies on both lines so the coordinates of that poin must satisfy both equations.
The solution of a linear equation in two variable comprises the coordinates of all points on the straight line represented by the equation.
The set of all points in a plane that are equidistant from a single point and a single line
true
They satisfy the equation x + y = 0
Yes. Calculate the ratio of the difference in y-coordinates and the difference in x-coordinates between pairs of points. If the ratio is the same, the points are collinear. If not, they are not. The only exception is if all the x-coordinates are he same and the ratio is not defined. In this case the points are also collinear - all on a vertical line.
If you mean points of: (3, -2) (-3, -2) (-4, 3) and (2, 3) then it graphs out as a parallelogram occupying all 4 quadrants.
Their first coordinates are positive and their second coordinates are negative.
the principal or horizontal axis of a system of coordinates, points along which have a value of zero for all other coordinates.
No.
A series of 3 points will always determine a plane unless 2 or all 3 points are identical points (they have the same coordinates).If the idea is to have the three points determine oneplane, a unique plane, then three points will do that as long as none of them have the same spacial coordinates (have identical locations) or as long as the three points do not lie on a single line
Points with integer coordinates are often called lattice points. Lattices exist in all dimensions.When we talk about lattices points on the rectangular Cartesian coordinate system, this is a two dimensional lattice. Three dimensional lattice points are often used to study crystals.
The solution set for a given equation is the set of all points such that their coordinates satisfy the equation.
A series of 3 points will always determine a plane unless 2 or all 3 points are identical points (they have the same coordinates).If the idea is to have the three points determine oneplane, a unique plane, then three points will do that as long as none of them have the same spacial coordinates (have identical locations) or as long as the three points do not lie on a single line.If a straight line can be drawn through all three points, they will not form one unique plane either.
It is the locus of all points whose coordinates satisfy the equation of the line.
Scale factor