Point (geometry)/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 18:36, 11 January 2010
- See also changes related to Point (geometry), or pages that link to Point (geometry) or to this page or whose text contains "Point (geometry)".
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- Cartesian coordinates [r]: Set of real numbers specifying the position of a point in two- or three-dimensional space with respect to orthogonal axes. [e]
- Circle (mathematics) [r]: A set of points in a plane defined by equal distance to a point of reference. [e]
- Euclidean geometry [r]: Form of geometry first codified by Euclid in his series of thirteen books, The Elements. [e]
- Geometry [r]: The mathematics of spacial concepts. [e]
- Graphic design [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Line (geometry) [r]: (or straight line) In elementary geometry, a maximal infinite curve providing the shortest connection between any two of its points. [e]
- Parabola [r]: The planar curve formed by the points that lie as far from a given line (the directrix) as from a given point (the focus). [e]
- Parallel (geometry) [r]: (of lines or planes) In elementary geometry: having no point in common. [e]
- Plane (geometry) [r]: In elementary geometry, a flat surface that entirely contains all straight lines passing through two of its points. [e]
- Point (disambiguation) [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Point-free geometry [r]: A form of geometry in which the primitive notion is that of "region" rather than "point". [e]
- Polar coordinates [r]: Two numbers—a distance and an angle—that specify the position of a point on a plane. [e]
- Polygon [r]: Two-dimensional geometric closed figure bounded by a continuous set of line segments. [e]
- Polytope [r]: The analog to a polygon or polyhedron in any number of dimensions or a polytope in n dimensions is a figure bounded by connected polytopes of dimension n-1. [e]