Yes, almost all the time. And when it is not coordinate planes it is coordinate hype-spaces (more than just the 2 dimensions that the coordinate plane allows).
Yes, they are.
The Cartesian Coordinate System was discovered by Rene Descartes.
A general coordinate system had to be devised prior to describing planes or other objects. As provided in the link, Rene Descartes is considered the founder of the Cartesian coordinate system in 1637, but Fermat also made contributions. See related links on the lives of Descartes and Fermat.
it is when you go to a career and you learn about cordinate planes
architects use coordinate planes to graph where they want the rooms to be
Yes, almost all the time. And when it is not coordinate planes it is coordinate hype-spaces (more than just the 2 dimensions that the coordinate plane allows).
Yes, they are.
The Cartesian Coordinate System was discovered by Rene Descartes.
yes
A general coordinate system had to be devised prior to describing planes or other objects. As provided in the link, Rene Descartes is considered the founder of the Cartesian coordinate system in 1637, but Fermat also made contributions. See related links on the lives of Descartes and Fermat.
a coordinate plane:)
Coordinate planes are typically labeled with Roman numerals to distinguish between the horizontal axis (X-axis) and the vertical axis (Y-axis). Roman numerals are used as a traditional and standardized way to label the axes in mathematics to avoid confusion. This labeling convention helps to clearly identify the axes and their corresponding values when graphing points or plotting equations on the coordinate plane.
Engineers uses the coordinate planes all the time. When you take higher engineering course you need to be extremely familiar and good at using coordinate planes in 3 dimensions. Architects use them to make designs and graphs of their model or building.
The axes of coordinate planes intersect at the point of origin.
A map is a good example.
That's O, the origin, by definition.