draw a hexogon and make six triangles no more than six unless you are doing a different math problem than i am.
This question is based on a misunderstanding of facts. A triangle can be but need not be a regular polygon. In fact most triangles are not regular: only equilateral triangles are.
Squares, rhombera, and equilateral triangles are always regular.
The diagonals (drawn from a point) help in dividing the regular polygon into smaller triangles. The sum of the areas of these smaller triangles help in determining the total area of the polygon.
A regular polygon is any polygon that has sides which are the same length and angles whose measures are equal. An equilateral triangle (also equiangular triangle) is a regular polygon. Other isosceles triangles (equilateral triangles are isosceles, but they are an exception) and scalene triangles are not regular polygons. A side note: Only in a triangle is a polygon regular solely if it is equilateral. (Since an equilateral triangle is equiangular as well). This is NOT always true in other polygons, like quadrilaterals, where it can be equilateral but not necessarily equiangular (a rhombus) or equiangular but not equilateral (a rectangle).
draw a hexogon and make six triangles no more than six unless you are doing a different math problem than i am.
This question is based on a misunderstanding of facts. A triangle can be but need not be a regular polygon. In fact most triangles are not regular: only equilateral triangles are.
The number of triangles that can be formed within a regular polygon depends on the number of sides the polygon has. For an n-sided polygon, where n is greater than or equal to 3, you can form n-2 triangles within the polygon. This is because each triangle is formed by connecting one vertex to any other two non-adjacent vertices. So, for example, in a regular pentagon (5-sided polygon), you can form 5-2 = 3 triangles.
Squares, rhombera, and equilateral triangles are always regular.
The diagonals (drawn from a point) help in dividing the regular polygon into smaller triangles. The sum of the areas of these smaller triangles help in determining the total area of the polygon.
Quadrilaterals and Triangles, if you're asking for polygon categories.
A polygon whose sides are all equal is known as a regular polygon. Some examples include squares and equilateral triangles.
A regular polygon is any polygon that has sides which are the same length and angles whose measures are equal. An equilateral triangle (also equiangular triangle) is a regular polygon. Other isosceles triangles (equilateral triangles are isosceles, but they are an exception) and scalene triangles are not regular polygons. A side note: Only in a triangle is a polygon regular solely if it is equilateral. (Since an equilateral triangle is equiangular as well). This is NOT always true in other polygons, like quadrilaterals, where it can be equilateral but not necessarily equiangular (a rhombus) or equiangular but not equilateral (a rectangle).
Assuming that radius would be the length from any vertex to the center of a figure, a regular hexagon. It can be divided into six congruent equilateral triangles.
20 triangles will fit into a 22 sided polygon whose interior angles add up to 3600 degrees
Equilateral
equilateral