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The fourth dimension has never been reached, may not exist, and frankly nothing is known about it, so while it may be theoretically possible to do this, it has never been done and is likely impossible.
The answer to that question is and will forever be unknown. we can only think of what it is like but we will never know.
The first dimension string on an architectural drawing should begin at the point representing the starting reference point of the dimension being measured. This point is typically indicated by a small arrow or dot.
falsetrue
Math dimensions determine the type of geometric object you are dealing with. 0 dimensions is a point, an object with no height, width, or depth. We draw points only to mark the loaction of the point. 1 dimension is the line, which has length but no width or depth. lines go on never ending in both directions, represented by the arrows on both sides. Rays are 1 dimension objects that never end only on one side. Line segments are 1 dimension objects that end on both sides. 2 dimension objacts are basic figures, and 3 dimension objects are complex figures like cubes, pryamids, etc.
unknown. It has never been found and the dimensions were never recorded.
dimension
never
This is a reference dimension. I.e. the part can and should be manufactured without using it directly. The non-bracketed dimensions should define the form of the part completely.
The fourth dimension has never been reached, may not exist, and frankly nothing is known about it, so while it may be theoretically possible to do this, it has never been done and is likely impossible.
no, never. for that physical apparatus is requed
he would never try that.
The answer to that question is and will forever be unknown. we can only think of what it is like but we will never know.
The first dimension string on an architectural drawing should begin at the point representing the starting reference point of the dimension being measured. This point is typically indicated by a small arrow or dot.
Lines that define the parameters of a dimension.Dimension lines are thin lines terminating in arrowheads. Place dimension lines no closer than 3/8" from the object outline. Parallel dimension lines should be a minimum of 1/4" apart. You may place parallel dimension lines more than 1/4" apart so long as the spacing between dimension lines is uniform throughout the drawing. Dimension lines are generally broken in the center of the line to provide a space for the dimension figure. Dimension figures for parallel dimension lines are staggered. In some structural or architectural drawings, you may find dimension figures placed above the dimension line.
falsetrue
Without knowing the third dimension, this can never be answered.