Routing Information Protocol (RIP) and Interior Gateway Routing Protocol (IGRP) are two very popular Distance Vector routing protocols
OSPFRIP v2EIGRPOSPF, IS-IS and RIP v2 are the open standard IGPs. Also, Cisco's EIGRP.fm
A position vector is a vector that represents the location of a point in space relative to a reference point or origin. It specifies the distance and direction from the origin to the point. In three-dimensional space, a position vector is typically denoted as <x, y, z>.
Yes.
What are three features of router-on-a-stick, inter-VLAN routing? (Choose three.)
1. Vector Notation. example: <2 m, 33 m, -8 m> 2. Distance and Angle. example: 15 meters at 30o North of East 3. ?
It is a three dimension vector : (x, y, z). It could be either a row vector or a column vector.
Yes. A vector in two dimensions is broken into two components, a vector in three dimensions broken into three components, etc... If the value of all but one component of a vector equal zero then the magnitude of the vector is equal to the non-zero component.
The Cartesian coordinates of the vector represented by the keyword "r vector" are the x, y, and z components of the vector in a three-dimensional coordinate system.
The three ways to describe a displacement vector are its magnitude (length), direction (angle or orientation), and starting and ending points in space. By specifying these three components, the full description of a displacement vector can be provided in three-dimensional space.
To specify a vector, you need a length (or magnitude), and a direction.
Yes.
It is the other way round - it's the vector that has components.In general, a vector can have one or more components - though a vector with a single component is often called a "scalar" instead - but technically, a scalar is a special case of a vector.