When drawing a graph, there are four quadrants, which are the "boxes" surrounding the origin.
Like Y = X Except it is a line through the origin in the second and fourth quadrant to show it's negativity.
Quadrant I : (+, +) Quadrant II : (-, +) Quadrant III : (-, -) Quadrant IV : (+, -)
Quadrant 3 Quadrant 4 Quadrant 2 Quadrant 1
The x and y coordinates are equal in the first and third quadrants. In the first quadrant, both x and y are positive, resulting in coordinates like (1, 1). In the third quadrant, both x and y are negative, resulting in coordinates like (-1, -1).
The fourth quadrant.
A first quadrant angle. In the general direction of this: / / / ----------------
Like Y = X Except it is a line through the origin in the second and fourth quadrant to show it's negativity.
I think a quadrant was used to see where on the planet you were. Explorers used this by measuring the distance I think between the sun and the constellation. I think this is what it is.
The negative ordinate represents a negative y coordinate. A negative abscissa implies a negative x coordinate. Therefore the coordinate should look like (-x,-y). These coordinates are located at third quadrant.
Quadrant I : (+, +) Quadrant II : (-, +) Quadrant III : (-, -) Quadrant IV : (+, -)
Quadrant I ( + , + ) Quadrant II ( - , + ) Quadrant III ( - , - ) Quadrant IV ( + , - )
Quadrant 3 Quadrant 4 Quadrant 2 Quadrant 1
The value of x will be negative in the bottom left quadrant (quadrant 3) and the top left quadrant (quadrant 2).
It is a line chart which usually starts at the origin, goes up in the first quadrant. It may return to the horizontal axis.
Quadrant 1: (1,5) Quadrant 2: (-2,3) Quadrant 3: (-3,-3) Quadrant 4:(4,-1)
The names of the quadrants on a graph are: First quadrant Second quadrant Third quadrant Fourth quadrant
It sounds like a term used in some science fiction story. "Quadrant" is often used in such stories to refer to a region of space.