An ordered pair or coordinates of a point in 2-dimensional space.
Yes and no. In two-dimensional Cartesian coordinates, the answer is usually yes. So the point (4,7) has x value 4 and y value 7. But there are other uses for ordered pairs. For example in polar coordinates a point is specified by an ordered pair (r, theta), and the second number is an angle. You need to know what context you are working in.
I assume you mean (8, 0). If one or both of the coordinates are zero, the point is not in any of the four quadrants. Instead, it is on the axes - between two quadrants.
The pair (2, 3) is the same as the pair (3, 2) but the ORDERED pair (2, 3) is NOT the same as the ORDERED pair (3, 2). In an ordered pair the order of the numbers does matter.
x and y
An ordered pair or coordinates of a point in 2-dimensional space.
The two points are the ordered pair of the coordinates of the point.
Yes and no. In two-dimensional Cartesian coordinates, the answer is usually yes. So the point (4,7) has x value 4 and y value 7. But there are other uses for ordered pairs. For example in polar coordinates a point is specified by an ordered pair (r, theta), and the second number is an angle. You need to know what context you are working in.
Cartesian coordinates. Also, the abscissa and the ordinate.
An ordered pair has two values. You need to define the absolute value of an ordered pair before the question can be answered. There are many possible metrics.
I assume you mean (8, 0). If one or both of the coordinates are zero, the point is not in any of the four quadrants. Instead, it is on the axes - between two quadrants.
An ordered pair is a list of two numbers, in which the order matters. For example, (5, 2) is an ordered pair; this pair is not the same as (2, 5). For comparison, for the numbers in a set the order does not matter.
A point, in two dimensional space, is defined as an ordered pair.
The pair (2, 3) is the same as the pair (3, 2) but the ORDERED pair (2, 3) is NOT the same as the ORDERED pair (3, 2). In an ordered pair the order of the numbers does matter.
An Ordered Pair proving Math isn't funny
x and y
An ordered pair is a pair of elements in a specific order, typically represented as (x, y) where x is the first element and y is the second element. It is commonly used in mathematics to represent coordinates on a graph or data points in a set.