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coordinate |
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coordinate![]() Coordinates are numbers that define the position of points in a plane or in space. In the Cartesian coordinate system, a point in a plane is charted based upon its location along intersecting horizontal and vertical axes. In the polar coordinate system, a point in a plane is defined by its distance from a fixed point and direction from a fixed line. In geometry, a number that defines the position of a point relative to a point or axis (reference line). Cartesian coordinates define a point by its perpendicular distances from two or more axes drawn through a fixed point mutually at right angles to each other. Polar coordinates define a point in a plane by its distance from a fixed point and direction from a fixed line. When working on the two-dimensional plane the coordinates can be plotted on a graph. The coordinates of the points A, B, C, and D are: A (3, 1), B (−3, 2), C (−1, −4), D (3, −2). Coordinates can, therefore, be both positive numbers, both negative numbers, or a positive and a negative number. The x- and y-axes intersect to create four quadrants. Once plotted, coordinates can be joined up to obtain straight-line graphs from linear equations or curves from quadratic equations and cubic equations. The intercept and gradient can be calculated.
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| Using Eglash's Virtual Bead Loom program, you can experiment with the Cartesian coordinate system to make your own beautiful works of art. The major problem is transmission of the actual operative field coordinate system to the coordinate system of the three-dimensional spatial model that has been previously designed from a series of CT images during preoperative preparation (figure 4). He is immortalized today in the name of the Cartesian coordinate system, and the transformation of thought he helped usher has left repercussions up to the modern day. |
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