analytic geometry  branch of  geometry   in which points are represented with respect to a coordinate system,  such as  Cartesian  coordinates , and in which the approach to geometric problems is  primarily algebraic. Its most common application is in the  representation of equations involving two or three variables as curves  in two or three dimensions or surfaces in three dimensions. For example,  the linear equation  ax + by + c =0 represents a  straight line in the  xy -plane, and the linear equation  ax  + by + cz + d =0 represents a plane in space,  where  a, b, c,  and  d  are constant numbers  (coefficients). In this way a geometric problem can be translated into  an algebraic problem and the methods of algebra brought to bear on its  solution. Conversely, the solution of a problem in algebra, such as  finding the roots of an equation or system of equations, can be  estimated or sometimes given exactly by geometric means, e.g., plotting  curves and surfaces and determining points of intersection. 
In plane analytic geometry a line is frequently described in terms  of its slope, which expresses its inclination to the coordinate axes;  technically, the slope  m  of a straight line is the  (trigonometric) tangent of the angle it makes with the  x -axis.  If the line is parallel to the  x -axis, its slope is zero. Two  or more lines with equal slopes are parallel to one another. In general,  the slope of the line through the points ( x1  ,  y1 ) and ( x2 ,  y2  ) is given by  m = ( y2  - y1 ) / ( x2 - x1  ). The conic sections are treated in analytic geometry as the curves  corresponding to the general quadratic equation  ax2 + bxy + cy2  + dx + ey + f =0, where  a, b, … , f  are  constants and  a, b,  and  c  are not all zero.   
In solid analytic geometry the orientation of a straight line is  given not by one slope but by its direction cosines, λ, μ, and ν, the  cosines of the angles the line makes with the  x-, y-,  and  z  -axes, respectively; these satisfy the relationship λ 2  +μ 2 +ν 2  = 1. In the same way that the conic sections are studied in two  dimensions, the 17 quadric surfaces, e.g., the ellipsoid, paraboloid,  and elliptic paraboloid, are studied in solid analytic geometry in terms  of the general equation  ax2 +  by2 + cz2  + dxy + exz + fyz + px + qy + rz  + s =0.   
The methods of analytic geometry have been generalized to four or  more dimensions and have been combined with other branches of geometry.  Analytic geometry was introduced by René  Descartes   in 1637 and was of fundamental importance in the development of the  calculus  by  Sir Isaac Newton and G. W.  Leibniz in the late 17th cent. More recently it has served as the basis  for the modern development and exploitation of  algebraic  geometry .
Taken From : http://www.encyclopedia.com/topic/analytic_geometry.aspx#1E1-analytGeo