Books I through IV and VI of
Euclid's Elements dealt with two-dimensional geometry, developing such notions as similarity of shapes, the
Pythagorean theorem (Proposition 47), equality of angles and
areas, parallelism, the sum of the angles in a triangle, and the three cases in which triangles are "equal" (have the same area), among many other topics. Later, the plane was described in a so-called
Cartesian coordinate system, a
coordinate system that specifies each
point uniquely in a
plane by a pair of
numerical coordinates, which are the
signed distances from the point to two fixed
perpendicular directed lines, measured in the same
unit of length. Each reference line is called a
coordinate axis or just
axis of the system, and the point where they meet is its
origin, usually at ordered pair (0, 0). The coordinates can also be defined as the positions of the
perpendicular projections of the point onto the two axes, expressed as signed distances from the origin. The idea of this system was developed in 1637 in writings by Descartes and independently by
Pierre de Fermat, although Fermat also worked in three dimensions, and did not publish the discovery. Both authors used a single (
abscissa) axis in their treatments, with the lengths of
ordinates measured along lines not-necessarily-perpendicular to that axis. The concept of using a pair of fixed axes was introduced later, after Descartes'
La Géométrie was translated into Latin in 1649 by
Frans van Schooten and his students. These commentators introduced several concepts while trying to clarify the ideas contained in Descartes' work. Later, the plane was thought of as a
field, where any two points could be multiplied and, except for 0, divided. This was known as the
complex plane. The complex plane is sometimes called the Argand plane because it is used in Argand diagrams. These are named after
Jean-Robert Argand (1768–1822), although they were first described by Danish-Norwegian land surveyor and mathematician
Caspar Wessel (1745–1818). Argand diagrams are frequently used to plot the positions of the
poles and
zeroes of a
function in the complex plane. ==In geometry==