In a TCP segment, the field used to determine if an arriving data unit exactly matches the data unit sent by the source is the Sequence Number field. This field indicates the position of the first byte of data in the segment, allowing the receiver to check if it received the correct data in the expected order. Additionally, the Acknowledgment Number field can confirm receipt of segments by indicating the next expected byte.
A line segment that has been cut exactly in half
111010001001000
It would read tggatc because in DNA t matches with A and C matches with G. In RNA a matches with U and C matches with G.
A line segment has exactly two endpoints. If it had less, then it would just be a point. If it was more, then it wouldn't be a segment anymore.
I'm not exactly sure what you mean by "segment" but the Constitution is divided into segments called Articles.
A line segment cannot have more than one midpoints because the midpoint is the halfway point between (or the middle of) the line segment, and the midpoint is exactly halfway between the beginning and exactly halfway between the end of the line segment, not a third of the way, etc.
No. The midpoint of a line segment is the single point exactly halfway between each endpoint.
A segment has exactly one bisector. This bisector is a line (or line segment) that divides the original segment into two equal parts and is perpendicular to it. No matter the length of the segment, the unique bisector will always pass through the midpoint of the segment.
A bisector
on any ray,there is exactly one point at a given distance from the endpoint of the ray
If each segment intersects exactly two other segment but could, if extended, intersect the third, then the figure is a quadrilateral. Otherwise it is a parallelogram.
A segment has two end points. If a line has one end point, then it must be called ray.