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The word line apparently derives from the Latin
linum, meaning flax plant from which linen
is produced; at one time, a stretched linen thread was the most reliable way to determine a straight line. Also see liner and lining.
The word line can refer to a queue area.
The word line can also mean a line of written, printed or spoken text.
Line is also the name of an obsolete unit of measurement, equal to one-twelfth of an imperial inch.
Electrical engineering
In electrical engineering, a line
is, more generally, any circuit (or loop) of an electrical system. This electric circuit loop (or electrical network), consists of electrical elements (or
components) connected directly by conductor terminals to other devices in series.
In telecommunications, a telephone line is a single-user circuit on a telephone communications system.
Straightness
Depending on context line may mean straight line, or also curve ("curved line"). To avoid confusion the former is usually applicable in mathematical texts, while in graphics, such as drawing, a line may well be
curved.
Mathematics
A line, or straight line, is, roughly speaking, an (infinitely) thin, (infinitely) long,
straight geometrical object, i.e. a curve that is long and straight. Given two points, one can always find exactly one line that passes through the two points; the line
provides the shortest connection between the points. Three or more points that lie on the same line are called
collinear. Two different lines can intersect in at most one point; two different planes can intersect
in at most one line. This intuitive concept of a line can be formalized in various ways.
If geometry is developed axiomatically (as in Euclid's Elements and later in David Hilbert's Foundations of
Geometry), then lines are not defined at all, but characterized axiomatically by their properties. "Everything that
satisfies the axioms for a line is a line." While Euclid did define a line as "length without breadth", he did not use this
rather obscure definition in his later development.
In Euclidean space Rn (and
analogously in all other vector spaces), we define a line L as a
subset of the form
-
where a and b are given vectors in
Rn with b non-zero. The vector b describes the direction
of the line, and a is a point on the line. Different choices of a and b can
yield the same line.
One can show that in R2, every line L is described by a linear equation of the form
-
with fixed real coefficients a, b and c such
that a and b are not both zero. Important properties of these lines are their slope, x-intercept and y-intercept.
More abstractly, one usually thinks of the real line as the prototype of a
line, and assumes that the points on a line stand in a one-to-one correspondence with the real numbers. However, one could also use the hyperreal numbers for this purpose, or even the long line of topology.
The "straightness" of a line, interpreted as the property that it minimizes distances between its points, can be generalized
and leads to the concept of geodesics on differentiable manifolds.
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