You use the distance formula.
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).
True
The distance between (4, 5) and (10, 3) = sqrt(40) = 2*sqrt(10) = 6.3246 approx.
The formula is the square root of: (x2-x1)^2 plus (y2-y1)^2
You use the distance formula.
Using the distance formula from (3, 1) to (7, 1) is 4 units
If you mean points of (-3, 1) and (-7, 1) then using the distance formula it is 10 units
(Distance between the points)2 = (difference of the two x-values)2 + (difference of the two y-values)2
By plugging in values... d=[(X2-X1)^2+(Y2-Y1)^2]^(1/2)
Once you know the coordinates, you can use the distance formula to find the lengths of the sides, then using that, you can find the area.
A coordinate plane! If it has one or more breaks in it is not a coordinate plane but only a part of one.
The midpoint formula and the distance formula
5 units
no, coordinate graph is a graph made on a coordinate plane i.e xy-plane
The distance between two points on a coordinate plane is calculated using the distance formula: Distance = √((x2 - x1)^2 + (y2 - y1)^2) In this case, the coordinates of the two points are (7, 1) and (7, 3). Since the x-coordinates are the same, we only need to calculate the difference in the y-coordinates, which is (3 - 1) = 2. Plugging this into the distance formula gives us: Distance = √((0)^2 + (2)^2) = √4 = 2. Therefore, the distance between the two points is 2 units.
It works out as 2