you can draw infinite lines
Grid line in MS-Word are a series of lines running up and down and back and forth in a way that looks sort of like a checker board. They are useful for helping you line up text and pictures with each other.
It depends on the scale you choose for your axes. If the major grid lines are at single integers (1, 2, 3...) then 0.4 would be 4 tenths of the way from the origin to the No.1 grid-line. If though you made every tenth grid-line = 1 then 0.4 would be the 4th grid-line.
12 lines
I looked up and I think you use them to draw graphs but can use them to draw straight lines.
Since the perimeter is 18, the sum of the length and breadth is 18/2 units = 9 units. Draw a straight line on the grid of less than 9 units. At right angles to that line, draw another line so that the two lines have a combined length of 9 units. These two lines are the two adjacent lines of the rectangle. Use the grid to draw line parallel to these so that you have a rectangle.
I'd prefer to draw it with a pencil.
Truthfully, grids help to draw straight lines, and beter accuracy.
You can try using a grid, take a picture of the toaster, Draw lines across the paper perfectly, put those lines on a bigger piece of paper(enlarging the lines) and draw square by square.
draw two lines perpendicular to each other. theses line will act as reference line. starting from reference line plot the point to its position.
Draw a rectangle and draw three lines in it.... Firstly, draw 3 lines and divide one line into two...then it will easy to draw a rectangle...
you can draw infinite lines
Draw a line. Draw a perpendicular to that line then a perpendicular from that one.
To draw a square with 3 lines, you can draw two perpendicular lines to form a right angle. Then, draw a diagonal line connecting the endpoints of the two perpendicular lines. This diagonal line will complete the square shape with only 3 lines.
grid lines are like calligraphy
Lines that intersect at regular intervals are a grid. A grid is created when a row and a column intersect.
Just draw a line... not a straight line, but a curvy one... Some people would draw two parallel curvy lines, with equally-spaced diagonal lines between, to represent the 'twist' of the rope.