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To work this out get some graph paper and draw the line.
The x-coordinate of the midpoint is the average of the x-coordinates of the end-points of the line and the y-coordinate of the midpoint is the average of the y-coordinates of the end-points of the line.
every thing counts as one, in the pros there is a line that if shot behind, it counts as 2 points
Another set of points are needed to work out the slope which is: y1-y2/x1-x2
The mode is the number of repeated data points. There is not a mode in the data you have given.
Such a line is said to work in duplex mode. Many technologies allow sending and receiving simultaneously.
The terminology "scatter diagram" is used in Microsoft Excel and it causes some confusion. The difference is in the x-axis. If my x data is 1900, 1901 2000 and my y data is 100, 300, 3000, then a line plot (in Excel) would show on the x-axis three regularly spaced marks corresponding to 1900, 1901 and 2000. However, on a scatter diagram, intervals are always numerically equal, so 1900 and 1901 are very close together. Scatter diagram, as Microsoft defines them, can show line only, lines and points or just points. It is the preferred plot for data in technical/ scientific work. Where the data is sparse and/or alternative interpretation possible, I would suggest showing both points and lines. Line graphs (again, as Microsoft defines it) can distort relationships. See related link below for some good examples.
It work out as a 1/2 or 0.5
because you have to show your work and make shore its right
A T1 connection works by using a fiber optic or copper line to carry data faster than a standard phone line. It carries data at a rate approximately 60 times faster.
>Two points that lie on the same plane. Any pair of points on the plane will thus >form a line. (In most basic geometry classes, the majority of the class work is >only concerned with one plane) Any number of points can be coplanar. In fact, any 3 points are always coplanar, and if they are not colinear (all three on the same line), they define a unique plane.
If the Ruger website will work for you, it has sn data published on line.