If the line segment is 1 inch shorter than the other line segment in Hopeton, then the length of the line segment would be 1 inch less than the length of the other line segment. So, if the other line segment is x inches long, then this line segment would be x - 1 inches long.
No, a line segment is a straight path that connects two points without any curves. A curved line, on the other hand, is not a line segment because it deviates from a straight path.
Yes, a line segment has two distinct endpoints where it terminates.
In the x86 processor architecture, memory addresses are specified in two parts called the segment and the offset. One usually thinks of the segment as specifying the beginning of a block of memory allocated by the system and the offset as an index into it. Segment values are stored in the segment registers. There are four or more segment registers: CS contains the segment of the current instruction (IP is the offset), SS contains the stack segment (SP is the offset), DS is the segment used by default for most data operations, ES (and, in more recent processors, FS and GS) is an extra segment register. Most memory operations accept a segment override prefix that allows use of a segment register other than the default one.
Yes, a line segment is a part of a line. A line extends infinitely in two directions, whereas a line segment is a finite portion of that line with two distinct endpoints.
7.74
A triangle with all sides the same lenght is an equilateral triangle.
No.
it means the same amount of lenght
Four.
No.
Isosceles Triangle (:
a square
Yes but, you do not have to write it because it's the same thing and there is no point to it
they are the same
No. Only regular polygons can be constructed from the same segment.
the angles stay the same but the lenght of the sides change.