nightweaver066
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jul 7, 2010
- Messages
- 1,585
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2012
If tanR is positive (finding principal argument), then its going to be in the 3rd quadrant and you're going to be working with negative radians -pi < x < -pi/2.
If tanR is negative, then you have to look at which quadrant the complex graph lies on the Argand diagram to determine which quadrant out of the first, second and fourth quadrant it's in.
What i like to do is that whenever i find an angle, i always convert it to its acute form and then determine whether i need to take it away from 180 or add it to something.
If tanR is negative, then you have to look at which quadrant the complex graph lies on the Argand diagram to determine which quadrant out of the first, second and fourth quadrant it's in.
What i like to do is that whenever i find an angle, i always convert it to its acute form and then determine whether i need to take it away from 180 or add it to something.