Wiki User
∙ 6y agoIf you mean (4, 5) and (10, 13) then the distance is 10
Wiki User
∙ 6y agoTo find the x-coordinate of a point on the xy-plane, you look at the horizontal distance of the point from the y-axis. The y-coordinate of a point on the xy-plane is the vertical distance of the point from the x-axis.
Point 1 = (x1, y1)Point2 = (x2, y2)d = ((x2 -x1)2 + ( y2 -x2 )2 )0.5
The answer is the x coordinate of the point.
The distance between them is the absolute value of the difference in their vertical coordinates.
The centre of a coordinate plane is the point (0,0), also called the origin.
To find the x-coordinate of a point on the xy-plane, you look at the horizontal distance of the point from the y-axis. The y-coordinate of a point on the xy-plane is the vertical distance of the point from the x-axis.
If you mean points of (5, 5) and (1, 5) then the distance is 4
What is used to locate a point in a coordinate plane
Point 1 = (x1, y1)Point2 = (x2, y2)d = ((x2 -x1)2 + ( y2 -x2 )2 )0.5
The answer is the x coordinate of the point.
A translation.
The distance between them is the absolute value of the difference in their vertical coordinates.
An ordered pair of numbers on the coordinate plane denotes a point.
The centre of a coordinate plane is the point (0,0), also called the origin.
It is called a POINT!
It is simply called a point in the coordinate or Cartesian plane.
It is a plane surface with an origin and a pair of orthogonal axes. The location of any point in the plane is given by an ordered pair of coordinates: the abscissa (distance to the right of the origin) and the ordinate (distance in the vertical direction from the origin).