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.
Quadrant angles are angles formed in the coordinate plane by the x-axis and y-axis. Each quadrant is a region bounded by the x-axis and y-axis, and is numbered counterclockwise starting from the positive x-axis. The angles in each quadrant have specific characteristics based on their trigonometric ratios, such as sine, cosine, and tangent values. In trigonometry, understanding quadrant angles is crucial for determining the sign of trigonometric functions and solving equations involving angles.
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.