argand diagram การใช้
- Where as in an Argand Diagram, the angle starts from " East " and increases in a counter-clockwise direction.
- A complex number lies in a complex plane having one real and one imaginary dimension, which may be represented as an Argand diagram.
- Thus, in the Argand diagram of the edge, the vertex points lie at the vertices of a regular polygon centered on the origin.
- :Do you have any reason to think that complex numbers and Argand diagrams are used in construction ? talk ) 19 : 11, 19 October 2015 ( UTC)
- I need to know how complex numbers and argand diagram concepts can be useful in drawing a plan for building and its construction talk ) 13 : 12, 19 October 2015 ( UTC)
- All of the stuff you were taught about complex arithmetic, argand diagrams and all that horse-shit would simply be the standard vector operations that you use for everything else where multiple numbers need to be grouped together.
- If now one wants to implement the square of a complex number ( represented by a point in the Argand diagram ), the object which has to be selected at the creation of the script must necessarily be a point, and the script is
- Note : The redirect Argand diagram-> Complex plane is tagged, and while " "'Argand diagrams "'" is bolded in the lede, they are not defined there and are not mentioned in the article's body .-- ToE 23 : 28, 24 November 2015 ( UTC)
- Note : The redirect Argand diagram-> Complex plane is tagged, and while " "'Argand diagrams "'" is bolded in the lede, they are not defined there and are not mentioned in the article's body .-- ToE 23 : 28, 24 November 2015 ( UTC)
- I'm not sure about what level you are talking about, though; Further Maths is Sixth Form ( US Junior / Senior years ), and tends to be very high level stuff ( calculus of hyperbolic functions, the Argand diagram ) Some school also run Pure Maths or Statistics course, which go beyond normal level maths but are far more focused on a single topic; since you say that additional maths covers cosec / cotan functions, I'm guessing it must be a lower level ( at GCSE, the UK currently only has one maths course, although it is divided into Foundation, Intermediate and Higher, and there are plans to split it into core maths and further maths ).