Coplanar Points are points that lie on the same line.
No. In order to be coplanar, points have to be in the line.
Yes, of course! By definition a line is a planar figure, and all the points of the line are therefore coplanar.
Yes, in Euclidean geometry.
Coplanar means on the same plane. As co-linear means on the same line.
One line cannot be coplanar, and there is nothing for it to meet.
No, they always are From Wikipedia.org, "The World's Encyclopedia" when I searched coplanar In geometry, a set of points in space is coplanar if the points all lie in the same geometric plane. For example, three distinct points are always coplanar; but four points in space are usually not coplanar. Since 3 points are always coplanar. A point and line are always coplanar
Coplanar Points are points that lie on the same line.
No. In order to be coplanar, points have to be in the line.
Yes, of course! By definition a line is a planar figure, and all the points of the line are therefore coplanar.
Yes, of course, two line segments can be coplanar: Think of the sides of a plane triangle.
Yes, in Euclidean geometry.
Coplanar means on the same plane. As co-linear means on the same line.
points that are not on the same line
A transverse line.
Collinear is passing through or lying on the same staright line. Coplanar is lying on or occurring in the same plane.
3 non-coplanar (pairwise) lines for 3 dimensional space.