A portrait of Rene Descartes.
A more widely used system are cartesian coordinates, based on a set of axes perpendicular to each other. They are named for Rene Descartes (“Day-cart"), a French scientist and philosopher who back in the 1600s devised a systematic way of labeling each point on a flat plane by a pair of numbers. You may well be already familiar with it.
The system is based on two straight lines (“axes"), perpendicular to each other, each of them marked with the distances from the point where they meet (“origin") --- distances to the right of the origin and above it, the origin being taken as positive and on the other sides as negative.
Graphs use this system, as do some maps.
This works well on a flat sheet of paper, but the real world is 3-dimensional and sometimes it is necessary to label points in 3-dimensional space. The cartesian
Very simple and clear, once a decision is made on which side of the sheet
NOTES / HIGHLIGHTS
| Color | Highlighted Text | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Please Sign In to create your own Highlights / Notes | |||
| Cover Image | Attributions |
|---|---|
| License: CC BY-NC |
| Image | Reference | Attributions |
|---|---|---|
| Credit: unknown Source: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Descartes-s-w.JPG License: Public Domain |
Your search did not match anything in .