Posts Tagged ‘different’
Friday, November 13th, 2009
An Overview of Composite Figures
Description
A detailed tutorial on what composite figures are. Step by step tutorial including several examples of how to identify composite figures for reference.
Overview
A composite figure is any figure that can be split into more than one shape. Hardly any regular shapes are considered to be composite shapes. The only one is a regular trapezoid – it can be split into three shapes, two triangles and a rectangle. You could technically consider a rectangle to be a composite figure – you can split it into squares or smaller rectangles – but since it doesn’t need to be split into different shapes to solve for area, then it is not considered a composite figure.
Tags: 2D, area, composite, different, figure, flat, geometrical, Geometry, rectangle, regular, shape, smaller, split, square, trapezoid, triangle, volume
Posted in Geometry | No Comments »
Thursday, November 12th, 2009
Definition of Skew Lines
Description
A detailed tutorial on skew lines. Step by step tutorial including several examples and a visual example of skew lines and what they are for reference.
Overview
Skew lines are two lines that do not intersect and are not parallel. In general, these lines have nothing in common. Think of dropping two sticks on the ground from high up. Provided they do not intersect each other (cross or touch each other in any way), those sticks are now a perfect example of skew lines. Typically, these lines are also not found in the same plane. Skew lines can only exist in three or more dimensions.
Tags: arithmetic, common, cross, different, dimension, Geometry, intersect, line, lines, nothing, parallel, plane, skew, three, touch
Posted in Arithmetic | No Comments »
Tuesday, November 10th, 2009
How to Make a Circle Graph
Description
A detailed tutorial on how to make circle graphs. Step by step tutorial including several examples of how to make circle graphs for reference.
Overview
Circle graphs, also referred to as pi charts to avoid confusing them with graphs on the coordinate plane, are graphs in the shape of a circle that deal with a specific set of data. Circle graphs deal with percentages of a whole. The title of the circle graph is your whole, and the circle represents the whole. Then the circle is cut off into different percentages, and each is labelled with the proper category and exactly what percent it is meant to represent. Very often each section of the circle will be a different color to avoid confusion.
Tags: algebra, categories, category, chart, circle, color, data, different, graph, label, percent, percentage. title, pi, represent, section, set
Posted in Algebra | No Comments »