Given an ordered pair, (x,y), the first number is the x coordinate.
You use the x-coordinate before the y- coordinate.
The x coordinate.
When writing points to be plotted on a Cartesian coordinate system, the x-coordinate is written first, followed by the y-coordinate. This format is typically represented as (x, y). For example, the point (3, 5) indicates that the x-coordinate is 3 and the y-coordinate is 5.
In the coordinate plane, the x-coordinate comes first, followed by the y-coordinate. A point is represented as (x, y), where x indicates the horizontal position and y indicates the vertical position. Thus, when plotting or reading coordinates, you always start with the x-value.
The X coordinate always goes first think a baby crawls before it walks
The first and second coordinate. X is the first coordinate and y is the second.
On a graph, you have two axis, x and y. In an ordered pair, the first number is the x coordinate, and the second number is the y coordinate. On the x-axis, if the x-coordinate is negative then you go left. If the x-coordinate is positive, then you go right. On the y-axis, it works the same way. If the y-coordinate is negative, you go down, but if it is positive, then you go up. For example, if you had the ordered pair (-7,4), then you would go left seven spaces on the x-axis and up four spaces on the y-axis.
Given an ordered pair, (x,y), the first number is the x coordinate.
You use the x-coordinate before the y- coordinate.
The x coordinate.
on a coordinate grid, X always comes before Y
Switch the x and y coordinates and multiply the first first coordinate (the new x coordinate) by -1
The x coordinate goes first.
The first coordinate is traditionally horizontal coordinate, often labelled as "x".
The x value is the first of a coordinate pair and tells you how far from the y axis the point is.
The first coordinate always is called the "x" coordinate, because it goes on the "x" axis, while the second coordinate is always called the "y" coordinate because it always goes on the "y" axis.