Consider any point P on the parallelogram. Show that this point is on the parallelogram is expressible as that linear combination of a and b and any point outside the //gram is not. a and b spans the whole plane, defined by these 2 vectors, providing they are linearly independent (i.e. not parallel and nonzero) and the restriction on the linear combination gives the set of all points on the parallelogram.
I'm sure it's easy but I'm a bit mind blanked as to how to prove it.
I'm sure it's easy but I'm a bit mind blanked as to how to prove it.
I suppose yeah it's easier to explain than to "show". I need to stop being pedantic about my definitions.
Ok this question has me stuck. Because I actually don't know how to neatly to the derivation for the volume of the parallelepiped.
I kinda cheated for the 2D version by just saying well |a||b|sin(theta)=|axb|=det(A) but I don't know how to replicate the proof into R3
In R3, it can quickly be done by comparison of normals.Dumb question that I don't feel any value in making a new thread for:
How do I prove two planes are (or are not) parallel?