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Three dimensions
Author:
Christina Bulen
,
Simon Gregg1
GeoGebra
Most of the points are just on a flat 2D surface. To come out of that, into three dimensions, you need a third number, like the point (3, 4, 5). Try putting in your own point with three small numbers.
New Resources
Untitled
Angle Addition: Warm Up Exercises
seo tool
Trefoil Knot
Rose Curve
Discover Resources
Lines and Circles
circumcenter- channy b
Option 1
NC - Ficha 31 - Mariana Vianna
Fehr problem 6&7 in notes
Discover Topics
Bar Chart or Bar Graph
Differential Equation
Poisson Distribution
Boxplot
Vectors 2D (Two-Dimensional)