Scalar vs. Vector Quantities and Distance vs. Displacement
Ever wonder why saying "I'm going 30 mph" is different from saying "I'm going 30 mph north"? That's the difference between scalar and vector quantities!
Scalar quantities only tell you the size or amount of something - they don't care about direction. Think of them as simple measurements like Gary's speed being 5 m/s, or how much you weigh, or how long something takes. Distance, mass, and time are all scalar quantities.
Vector quantities are more specific because they include both size AND direction. Velocity is speed with direction, displacement is distance with direction, and weight actually has direction too (it always points toward Earth's center).
Here's where it gets interesting: distance and displacement sound similar but they're totally different! Distance is scalar - it's just how much ground you've covered, like the length of your walking path. It's always measured in meters, can never be zero or negative, and direction doesn't matter at all.
Displacement is vector - it's the straight-line difference between where you started and where you ended up. We write it as Δx (delta x), which equals your final position minus your initial position: Δx = X_final - X_initial.
Quick Check: If you walk around the block and end up back home, your distance might be 500 meters, but your displacement is zero because you're back where you started!