Asked by Jennifer
What is the dimensions of a line.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
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A (straight) line is one-dimensional — it has length but no width or thickness.
- In Euclidean geometry/topology: a line (or line segment) is a 1‑D object (topological/manifold dimension = 1).
- In physics/measurement: it has units of length (meters, etc.); area and volume are zero.
Note: some pathological or fractal “curves” (e.g., the Koch curve) can have non‑integer Hausdorff dimension >1, but an ordinary geometric line is 1‑dimensional.
- In Euclidean geometry/topology: a line (or line segment) is a 1‑D object (topological/manifold dimension = 1).
- In physics/measurement: it has units of length (meters, etc.); area and volume are zero.
Note: some pathological or fractal “curves” (e.g., the Koch curve) can have non‑integer Hausdorff dimension >1, but an ordinary geometric line is 1‑dimensional.
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