It is difficult to plot in three dimensions on a 2 dimensional paper. When I picture a three dimensional plot I think of three intersecting planes and the points suspended in the appropriate area.
Imagine drawing a house on a corner. Place the points as though you were drawing the windows of that house.
Points are dimensionless.
plot 6 points on the grid
An area can not be defined unless there are at minimum 3 distinct points defined. What you have with two points is a line, or line segment, which are of 1 dimension.
A point in 3 dimensional space will have three coordinates associated with it. These may be Cartesian or Polar and how you plot the point will depend on that. Given two diagonal points of a rectangular prism, there are infinitely many possible orientations. To see this hold a small box (a rectanglar prism) with your thumb and forefinger pressing against opposite vertices. You can then rotate the box representing the various possible orientations of the prism.
No, a plot does not have to be presented in bullet points. A plot can be written in narrative form using paragraphs to describe the sequence of events in a story. Bullet points can be used as an outline or summary of key plot points, but they are not mandatory for writing a plot.
A line is not made up of points for the very reason that points have no dimension. It is absolutely impossible for things with no dimension, so matter how many are added, to ever equal something of one dimension. It is easy to think of points as dots. Dots, however, are only representations of points to help us visualize pints. Although many dots added together can make a line, points cannot.
The point (or points) where the plot is at its highest.
From a rough sketch they appear to be parallel lines but for a more accurate answer plot the points on the Cartesian plane
1.physical dimension 2.mental dimension 3.social dimension
Three, of course!
A line plot is just a graph with points and a line graph the points are connected.
A line is a series of points extending infinitely in opposite directions. Because a single point has no dimension we get only one dimension when we line the points up.