Yes, it can.
Yes, if no endpoints are defined.
Given a line, there are an infinite number of different planes that it lies in.
-- An infinite number of different planes can intersect the same line. -- The same line can lie in an infinite number of different planes. -- An infinite number of different lines can intersect the same plane.
There's no limit to the number of them. A more cool and sexy way to say the same thing might be: "An infinite number."
Yes, it can.
A line, ray, or line segment contains an infinite number of points.
Yes, if no endpoints are defined.
Given a line, there are an infinite number of different planes that it lies in.
The keyword "infinite" does not have a specific numerical value on the infinite number line of CodeSignal. It represents a concept of endlessness and is not a specific point on the number line.
An infinite number. Each point on a line, however small the line is, can have a perpendicular through it. And since there are an infinite number of points on any line, the answer is an infinite number.
An infinite number of planes. Picture a line and now picture planes going in every direction through the line,
infinite number of lines
It does not. It is infinite
infinite
-- An infinite number of different planes can intersect the same line. -- The same line can lie in an infinite number of different planes. -- An infinite number of different lines can intersect the same plane.
There's no limit to the number of them. A more cool and sexy way to say the same thing might be: "An infinite number."