degree and radian are juest unit measurment of angle
Degree measure is based off of a division of 360 degrees in a circle. Radian measure is based off of a division of 2PI in a full circle.
A rhombus has 4 sides of equal length and may be crooked and a rectangle must have four 90 [[Q/Whats the difference between a rectangle and a rhombus#|degree]] angles. A square is both a rectangle and a rhombus.
those are not anything like common angles. Usually countersinks for flat head screws are 82 degrees. some countersinks do 90 degrees. And that's about all you see are 82 and 90 degree countersink bits. 100 degree and 130 degree countersinks are more often found in Aircraft flush fittings/bolts
A rhombus has 4 sides of equal length and may be crooked and a rectangle must have four 90 degree angles. A square is both a rectangle and a rhombus.
bal amar
ewan q
The cardinality of a finite set is the number of elements in the set. The cardinality of infinite sets is infinity but - if you really want to go into it - reflects a measure of the degree of...
The cardinality of a finite set is the number of elements in the set. The cardinality of infinite sets is infinity but - if you really want to go into it - reflects a measure of the degree of...
Nothing
A degree is a unit of temperature.
The cardinality of a finite set is the number of elements in the set. The cardinality of infinite sets is infinity but - if you really want to go into it - reflects a measure of the degree of infiniteness. So, for example, the cardinality of {1,2,3,4,5} is 5. The cardinality of integers or of rational numbers is infinity. The cardinality of irrational numbers or of all real numbers is also infinity. So far so good. But just as you thought it all made sense - including the infinite values - I will tell you that the cardinality of integers and rationals is aleph-null while that of irrationals or reals is a bigger infinity - aleph-one.
There is no difference between degree Celsius and Celsius degree. Both terms are used interchangeably to refer to a unit of temperature measurement on the Celsius scale.
1. Cardinality 2. Conditionality 3. Recursiveness 4. Degree
In Mathematics, the cardinality of a set is the number of elements it contains. So the cardinality of {3, 7, 11, 15, 99} is 5. The cardinality of {2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12} is 6. * * * * * That is all very well for finite sets. But many common sets are infinite: integers, rationals, reals. The cardinality of all of these sets is infinity, but they are of two "levels" of infinity. Integers and rationals, for example have a cardinality of Aleph-null whereas irrationals and reals have a cardinality of aleph-one. It has been shown that there are no sets of cardinality between Aleph-null and Aleph-one.
Same degree, difference in the way you abbreviated it.
The cardinality of [0,1) is equal to the cardinality of (0,1) which has the same cardinality as the real numbers.