It contains the whole line.
If two points are in a plane, then the line that contains the points is in that plane
coplaner points- are points lying on his the same plane,.. solution: plane R contains XY XY contains X and Y...
Coplanar.
No. The tiniest piece of a plane contains an infinite number of points. But if you give us just three points, then we know exactly what plane you're talking about, and it can't be any other plane.
It contains the whole line.
Yes, a plane containing 2 points of a line contains the entire line. Let us consider two points on a plane and then draw a line segment joining those two points. Since the points lie on the plane so line segment has to lie completely on that plane too. Now if we extend the line segment indefinitely in both directions we get a line and that line also has to lie on the same plane since some definite part(line segment) of it(line) also lies on the same plane.
If two points are in a plane, then the line that contains the points is in that plane
legends a plane would be called the xy-plane if it had the x and y points on it Y axis
coplaner points- are points lying on his the same plane,.. solution: plane R contains XY XY contains X and Y...
If it is a straight line it must be in the same plane. Otherwise not necessarily.
Coplanar.
X and Y
The points are collinear, and there is an infinite number of planes that contain a given line. A plane containing the line can be rotated about the line by any number of degrees to form an unlimited number of other planes.If, on the other hand, the points are not collinear, then the plane has no wriggle room: it is stuck fast in one place - there can be only one plane containing all the points. Provided they are non-colinear, three points will define a plane.
No. The tiniest piece of a plane contains an infinite number of points. But if you give us just three points, then we know exactly what plane you're talking about, and it can't be any other plane.
There are an infinite number of any kind of points in any plane. But once you have three ( 3 ) non-collinear points, you know exactly which plane they're in, because there's no other plane that contains the same three non-collinear points.
Yes- planes contain infinitely many points and every pair of points in plane determine a line in that plane, so every plane contains infinitely many lines.