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From: Sam Wormley on 3 Mar 2007 22:01 Ka-In Yen wrote: > On Mar 3, 9:58 am, "Eric Gisse" <jowr...(a)gmail.com> wrote: > > > Did you finish your homework? > > Home work for Eric Gisse: > A rectangle sits in 3D space. The area vector of the rectangle is A, > and the legth vector of one side of the rectangle is L. Please find > the length vector of the other side of the rectangle? > > Volume = A.BxC = C.AxB = B.CxA Area_ab = A.B = B.A Area_bc = C.B = B.C Area_ca = C.A = A.C
From: Eric Gisse on 3 Mar 2007 22:23 On Mar 3, 5:08 pm, "Ka-In Yen" <yenk...(a)yahoo.com.tw> wrote: > On Mar 3, 9:58 am, "Eric Gisse" <jowr...(a)gmail.com> wrote: > > Did you finish your homework? > > Home work for Eric Gisse: > A rectangle sits in 3D space. The area vector of the rectangle is A, > and the legth vector of one side of the rectangle is L. Please find > the length vector of the other side of the rectangle? There is no such thing as "area vector", ignorant shitstain. Go pollute some other newsgroup with your idiocy.
From: Uncle Al on 4 Mar 2007 14:49 Ka-In Yen wrote: > > On Mar 3, 9:58 am, "Eric Gisse" <jowr...(a)gmail.com> wrote: > > Did you finish your homework? > > Home work for Eric Gisse: > A rectangle sits in 3D space. The area vector of the rectangle is A, > and the legth vector of one side of the rectangle is L. Please find > the length vector of the other side of the rectangle? "Area vector"? Is that like a position vector or the number of testiclettes in your nutsack vector? OK, Uncle Al is intrigued. Give some examples of scalars. -- Uncle Al http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/ (Toxic URL! Unsafe for children and most mammals) http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/lajos.htm#a2
From: Pmb on 4 Mar 2007 15:35 "Uncle Al" <UncleAl0(a)hate.spam.net> wrote in message news:45EB22D4.47C79CA7(a)hate.spam.net... > Ka-In Yen wrote: >> >> On Mar 3, 9:58 am, "Eric Gisse" <jowr...(a)gmail.com> wrote: >> >> Did you finish your homework? >> >> Home work for Eric Gisse: >> A rectangle sits in 3D space. The area vector of the rectangle is A, >> and the legth vector of one side of the rectangle is L. Please find >> the length vector of the other side of the rectangle? > > "Area vector"? Is that like a position vector or the number of > testiclettes in your nutsack vector? OK, Uncle Al is intrigued. Give > some examples of scalars. I don't see where they got that notion of area vector. As I know it the "Area Vector" is a vector whose direction is normal to a surface element and whose magnitude is the area of the surface element. I guess you can extend this to finite areas which would then make the above comment meaningful, but not something which is readily solveable due to lack of information. Pete
From: Ka-In Yen on 5 Mar 2007 19:23
On Mar 4, 11:01 am, Sam Wormley <sworml...(a)mchsi.com> wrote: > Ka-In Yen wrote: > > On Mar 3, 9:58 am, "Eric Gisse" <jowr...(a)gmail.com> wrote: > > > Did you finish your homework? > > > Home work for Eric Gisse: > > A rectangle sits in 3D space. The area vector of the rectangle is A, > > and the legth vector of one side of the rectangle is L. Please find > > the length vector of the other side of the rectangle? > > Volume = A.BxC = C.AxB = B.CxA > Area_ab = A.B = B.A > Area_bc = C.B = B.C > Area_ca = C.A = A.C Plenty of candy bars will be given to you after you write down your derivation step by step. |