@vaporeon_ if you're truly curious I could share a picture from my undergraduate e&m textbook which goes over this in the first chapter
Also how familiar are you with sin and cos?
@wallhackio I might be misremembering, but I think sin(phi) = y/z and cos(phi)=x/z in this picture, so the lengths would be x=cos(phi)*z and y=sin(phi)*z... Am I wrong?
@wallhackio Unrelatedly, I am very curious why you are drawing this on what looks like a floor or a wall...
@vaporeon_ I took picture of the floor and drew math on that picture, it was fast as there were no pens and paper in my vicinity
@vaporeon_ yes this is right
@wallhackio Glad to hear that I didn't mess it up, but how is this related to rotation?
@vaporeon_ you will see when I share the textbook excerpt tomorrow :)
@vaporeon_ I will give you the math tomorrow
@wallhackio Yes, please, do share the picture
Regarding sin and cos: I am aware that they represent the ratio of some sides of a triangle where one of the angle is 90°, and that it's also a function, and that you can define it as an infinite sum (I forgot the terms of the sum, though...), but I lack an intuition for using it to rotate things