The domain.
The INVERSE of any relation is obtained by switching the coordinates in each ordered pair.
The origin, in the Cartesian coordinate system, is the point with coordinates (0, 0). So, if you have another ordered pair, the ordered pair doesn't "have an origin"; rather, the origin is another point.
Cartesian coordinates. Also, the abscissa and the ordinate.
The domain is the set of the first number of each ordered pair and the range is the set of the second number.
A pair of numbers that are used to locate a point on a graph is called a ordered pair and is expressed as (x,y) where x is the location horizontally and y is the location vertically. For example the ordered pair (3,5) would be 3 to the right and 5 up away from the origin of the graph (0,0).Is called a ordered pair================ They are called coordinates. They need not be horizontal and vertical distances as suggested by the answer above. They could be polar coordinates which are the angle from the horizontal (anticlockwise), and distance from the origin.
The INVERSE of any relation is obtained by switching the coordinates in each ordered pair.
ordered pair
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An ordered pair of Cartesian coordinates.
Coordinates
The coordinates, possibly.
In the ordered pair (a, b), the object a is called the first entry, and the object b the second entry of the pair. Alternatively, the objects are called the first and second coordinates, or the left and right projections of the ordered pair.
An ordered pair gives coordinates and location
ordered pair
x and y coordinates
They are called coordinates.
They're called Coordinates