The run of a line segment is the horizontal distance between the x-coordinates of two points. To find the run, you subtract the x-coordinate of the left point from the x-coordinate of the right point. This calculation gives you the length of the base of the triangle formed by the line segment on the coordinate plane.
subtracting
The question makes no sense. -620 is not a coordinate
The origin on a graph is the point (0,0).You can find the distance to a point by applying the Pythagorean theorem:Square the x coordinate and add it to the square of the y - coordinate of the point.Now take the square root of your answer.The result is the straight line distance from the origin to the point.
First find the length between the midsegment point and coordinate B. The difference between 0 and -3 is 3. Thus, half the line is 3. So, to get to A, we have to go 3 in the other direction. -3 and 3 more would make Coordinate A land on (-6,2)
I cannot see the graph. I'm assuming the point is on a coordinate graph. Without seeing the graph, the x coordinate cannot be found but I can give a little advice. When reading coordinates, the x coordinate (or x-ordinate to be exact) is the first number in the ordered pair (x,y). To remember this, think alphabetically, x comes before y. On a coordinate plane, to find the x-ordinate you need to count how far left/right the point is from y axis (up /down axis). Given graph paper makes this easier. If you do not have graph paper, draw a line straight up and down from the point until your line reaches the x axis (left/right axis) and then read the number where your line intersects the x-axis, this is your x ordinate. If your point is to the right of the y-axis, the x ordinate would be positive; if to the left of the y-axis, your x-ordinate would be negative; if your point is on the y axis; your x-ordinate is 0.
subtracting
Vertical.
io4uir097
According to the question, you HAVE the point!
The answer is the x coordinate of the point.
By subtracting it from 360 degrees
It is called that point...(say, 5, -4) but in the x coordinate. a question may be...Find the x cooriinate of 5, -4, and the x coordinate of it would just be caalled the x coordinate of 5, -4
-- square the point's x-coordinate -- square the point's y-coordinate -- add the two squares together -- take the square-root of the sum -- the answer is the distance of the point from the origin. This works because if you draw a line down from the point to the x-axis (length is y-coordinate), then along the x-axis to the origin (length is x-coordinate), and back to the point (length is distance), you just made a right triangle. Then you can use the Pythagorean Theorem to find the length of the long side (the distance) since you know the length of the two shorter sides.
the deivative of a function is the gradient, at a point if you can sub in the x coordinate for that point
To find out the coordinates of a point in the coordinate system you do the opposite. Begin at the point and follow a vertical line either up or down to the x-axis. There is your x-coordinate. And then do the same but following a horizontal line to find the y-coordinate.
To find the x-coordinate of a point on the xy-plane, you look at the horizontal distance of the point from the y-axis. The y-coordinate of a point on the xy-plane is the vertical distance of the point from the x-axis.
To find the midpoint between two points:The x-coordinate of the midpoint is the average of the x-coordinates of the two points.Similar for the y-coordinate.