curved line - definitie. Wat is curved line
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Wat (wie) is curved line - definitie

MATHEMATICAL IDEALIZATION OF THE TRACE LEFT BY A MOVING POINT
Jordan curve; Continuous path; Closed curve; Space curve; Curved; Arc (geometry); Skew curve; Mathematical curves; Mechanical curve; Major arc; Arc (curvature); Regular curve; ◠; ◡; ◜; ◝; ◞; ◟; 1-manifold; Smooth curve; Simple curve; Open curve; Mathematical curve; Space curves; Curve (geometry); Great arc; Sharp curve; Arc shaped; Curve (mathematics); ⌒; Arc (geometric); Curved line; Curve segment; Curved line segment; Curved lines; Great-circle arc; Continuous curve; Subarc; Path (geometry); Topological curve; Surface curve; Curve (topology)
  • The curves created by slicing a cone ([[conic section]]s) were among the curves studied in ancient [[Greek mathematics]].
  • Analytic geometry allowed curves, such as the [[Folium of Descartes]], to be defined using equations instead of geometrical construction.
  • A [[dragon curve]] with a positive area
  • [[Megalithic art]] from Newgrange showing an early interest in curves
  • A [[parabola]], one of the simplest curves, after (straight) lines

curve         
(curves, curving, curved)
1.
A curve is a smooth, gradually bending line, for example part of the edge of a circle.
...the curve of his lips.
...a curve in the road.
N-COUNT: usu with supp
2.
If something curves, or if someone or something curves it, it has the shape of a curve.
Her spine curved...
The track curved away below him.
...a knife with a slightly curving blade...
A small, unobtrusive smile curved the cook's thin lips.
VERB: V, V adv/prep, V-ing, V n
3.
If something curves, it moves in a curve, for example through the air.
The ball curved strangely in the air.
VERB: V
4.
You can refer to a change in something as a particular curve, especially when it is represented on a graph.
Each firm will face a downward-sloping demand curve...
N-COUNT: usu with supp
5.
If someone throws you a curve or if they throw you a curve ball, they surprise you by doing something you do not expect. (mainly AM)
At the last minute, I threw them a curve ball by saying, 'We're going to bring spouses'.
PHRASE: V inflects
curve         
¦ noun a line or outline which gradually deviates from being straight for some or all of its length.
?a line on a graph (whether straight or curved) showing how one quantity varies with respect to another.
?(also curve ball) Baseball a delivery in which the pitcher causes the ball to deviate from a straight path by imparting spin.
¦ verb form or cause to form a curve.
Origin
ME: from L. curvare 'to bend', from curvus 'bent'.
curve         
I
n.
1) to describe, make a curve (the road makes a curve to the right)
2) to plot a curve ('to locate a curve by plotted points')
3) (teaching) to grade (AE), mark on a curve
4) a hairpin, horseshoe; sharp curve
II
v.
1) to curve sharply
2) (D; intr.) to curve to (to curve to the right)

Wikipedia

Curve

In mathematics, a curve (also called a curved line in older texts) is an object similar to a line, but that does not have to be straight.

Intuitively, a curve may be thought of as the trace left by a moving point. This is the definition that appeared more than 2000 years ago in Euclid's Elements: "The [curved] line is […] the first species of quantity, which has only one dimension, namely length, without any width nor depth, and is nothing else than the flow or run of the point which […] will leave from its imaginary moving some vestige in length, exempt of any width."

This definition of a curve has been formalized in modern mathematics as: A curve is the image of an interval to a topological space by a continuous function. In some contexts, the function that defines the curve is called a parametrization, and the curve is a parametric curve. In this article, these curves are sometimes called topological curves to distinguish them from more constrained curves such as differentiable curves. This definition encompasses most curves that are studied in mathematics; notable exceptions are level curves (which are unions of curves and isolated points), and algebraic curves (see below). Level curves and algebraic curves are sometimes called implicit curves, since they are generally defined by implicit equations.

Nevertheless, the class of topological curves is very broad, and contains some curves that do not look as one may expect for a curve, or even cannot be drawn. This is the case of space-filling curves and fractal curves. For ensuring more regularity, the function that defines a curve is often supposed to be differentiable, and the curve is then said to be a differentiable curve.

A plane algebraic curve is the zero set of a polynomial in two indeterminates. More generally, an algebraic curve is the zero set of a finite set of polynomials, which satisfies the further condition of being an algebraic variety of dimension one. If the coefficients of the polynomials belong to a field k, the curve is said to be defined over k. In the common case of a real algebraic curve, where k is the field of real numbers, an algebraic curve is a finite union of topological curves. When complex zeros are considered, one has a complex algebraic curve, which, from the topological point of view, is not a curve, but a surface, and is often called a Riemann surface. Although not being curves in the common sense, algebraic curves defined over other fields have been widely studied. In particular, algebraic curves over a finite field are widely used in modern cryptography.

Voorbeelden uit tekstcorpus voor curved line
1. After the visitor chooses from three ambiguous objects, (a slightly curved line, a circle, and four vertical lines) the animation places a character together with the selection, and presents the visitor with three options as to what the objects actually are. (e.g., Do the four vertical lines represent the trunks of trees, mirrors, or falling raindrops?) Defining the object determines the character‘s subsequent actions, and sliding a bit of education into the exercise, the elemental nature of the drawings reminds the viewer that there can be more than one way to look at any given object or problem.