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You will also need the angles so that you can use the Isosceles Triangle Theorems to solve for the base of isosceles triangle when only two sides are given.
It depends on the infoamtion that you have.
The median is the middle number. If there is an odd number of numbers in the set, the median is the middle number, and the only way to find the missing number is if the median is the missing number. If there is an even number of numbers in the set, the median is the average of the two middle numbers, and the only way to find the missing number is if the median is one of those two numbers. If it is, you can take the median and the one of the two numbers you know. Use the formula (# +#)/2=median and solve.
The answer will depend on what x is: another angle, or length of side or median or whatever. Since you cannot be bothered to provide that information, I cannot provide a sensible answer.
Roughly speaking, finding the third quartile is similar to finding the median. First, use the median to split the data set into two equal halves. Then the third quartile is the median of the upper half. Similarly, the first quartile is the median of the lower half.
You will also need the angles so that you can use the Isosceles Triangle Theorems to solve for the base of isosceles triangle when only two sides are given.
It depends on the infoamtion that you have.
IM A BTS ARMY
The median is the middle number. If there is an odd number of numbers in the set, the median is the middle number, and the only way to find the missing number is if the median is the missing number. If there is an even number of numbers in the set, the median is the average of the two middle numbers, and the only way to find the missing number is if the median is one of those two numbers. If it is, you can take the median and the one of the two numbers you know. Use the formula (# +#)/2=median and solve.
To find the Median in Math, if you have two numbers, the Median will be the middle number. If you had 1 and 10 to find the Median from, the answer would be 5. Also, if the highest number is not an even number, you use a point. Example: 1 ----- ? ----- 9 ? = 4.5. That solve your answer?
That's not enough information to solve the problem.
The answer will depend on what x is: another angle, or length of side or median or whatever. Since you cannot be bothered to provide that information, I cannot provide a sensible answer.
Roughly speaking, finding the third quartile is similar to finding the median. First, use the median to split the data set into two equal halves. Then the third quartile is the median of the upper half. Similarly, the first quartile is the median of the lower half.
Average the middle two, that is, add them up and divide by two.
Make it a right triangle where one side of the right triangle is half the length of the non-identical side of the isosceles, the hypotenuse of the right triangle is the length of one of the identical sides of the isosceles triangle, then use the Pythagorean theorem. a^2+b^2=c^2. Where "a" is the length of one of the identical sides, and "c" is the length of half the non-identical sides. Solve for "b" and that is your height.
(In this case, the median is the average) Find the median ((29 + 31) / 2) = 30 , multiply by number of numbers (30) = 30 * 30 = 900
First find 180 minus the vertex angle and divide that by 2 to get the other angles. Then solve the other sides by using sin(vertex angle)/base=sin(other angles)/other sides.