That depends on the context. For example, the rectangular or cartesian coordinate system can be divided into 4 quadrants named 1-4. Knowing which quadrant a point is in will tell you the sign of the x and y coordinates.. For example, the x and y values of a point in quadrant 1 are both positive. In quadrant two, the x is negative and the y is positive, while in quadrant 3, they are both negative. The 4th quadrant has negative y values and positive x values.
they are called quadrant 1st quadrant lies between x,y 2nd quadrant -x,y 3rd quadrant -x, -y 4th quadrant x, -y
That's Quadrant - I .
Quadrant one is the upper right quadrant, or where both X and Y are positive.
If x = 35 then it makes no sense for x to be in the second quadrant.
Sometimes they do, sometimes they don't.It depends upon which quadrant the point is in:In quadrant I they both have the same sign - positive;In quadrant II they have the different signs - x is negative whilst y is positive;In quadrant III they both have the same sign - negative;In quadrant IV they have the different signs - x is positive whilst y is negative;
That depends on the context. For example, the rectangular or cartesian coordinate system can be divided into 4 quadrants named 1-4. Knowing which quadrant a point is in will tell you the sign of the x and y coordinates.. For example, the x and y values of a point in quadrant 1 are both positive. In quadrant two, the x is negative and the y is positive, while in quadrant 3, they are both negative. The 4th quadrant has negative y values and positive x values.
Quadrants I and III. In Quadrant I, the values are both positive. In Quadrant III, the values are both negative.
they are called quadrant 1st quadrant lies between x,y 2nd quadrant -x,y 3rd quadrant -x, -y 4th quadrant x, -y
The value of x will be negative in the bottom left quadrant (quadrant 3) and the top left quadrant (quadrant 2).
Quadrant I (x, y) Quadrant II (-x, y) Quadrant III (-x, -y) Quadrant IV (x, -y) Where x and y are both positive numbers.
Quadrant I: x positive, y positive. Quadrant II: x negative, y positive. Quadrant III: x negative, y negative. Quadrant II: x positive, y negative.
The third (or SouthWest) quadrant.
That would be Quadrant I
That's Quadrant - I .
Quadrant one is the upper right quadrant, or where both X and Y are positive.
-1