Mathematics Asked by Jordan Farris on January 7, 2021
Let’s say I have a line segment given ?1 and ?2. I can calculate the Distance between the two, and the Slope, which will help.
I want to ‘shorten’ the line segment by equal Distance X on both points of the line segment. Therefore, ?1 and ?2 will move X distance closer to each other producing new points ?3 and ?4. Together these new points will be a ‘shortened’ line segment, with the same exact slope and intermediate points between the ?3 and ?4.
How Do I calculate ?3 and ?4? (assuming both are the same process)
Suppose distance between points $P,Q$ be denoted by $d(P,Q)$. Then you can find $d(P_1,P_2)$, call it $D$.
$P_3$ divides the segment $overline{P_1P_2}$ internally in the ratio $X:(D-X)$, so you can use the section formula $$ P_3 = dfrac{(D-X)P_1+XP_2}D tag{1}$$
and $P_4$ divides the segment $overline{P_1P_2}$ internally in the ratio $(D-X):X$, so $$ P_4 = dfrac{XP_1+(D-X)P_2}D$$
Note: If $P$ has coordinates $(x_P,y_P)$ (assuming you are working with $2$ coordinates, it works for any number of coordinates), then for $P_3=(x_{P_3},y_{P_3})$, $(1)$ means "apply it to each coordinate of $P_2$ and $P_3$", i.e. $$x_{P_3}=dfrac{(D-X)cdot x_{P_1}+Xcdot x_{P_2}}D\ y_{P_3}=dfrac{(D-X)cdot y_{P_1}+Xcdot y_{P_2}}D$$
Correct answer by Fawkes4494d3 on January 7, 2021
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