yes it's base X height divide by 2
It's one-half the base x height. For example a triangle with a base of 10 cm and a height of 12 cm would have an area of 60 sq cm. (1/2 of 10 equal 5; 5 x 12 equal 60)
The area of a triangle is one-half the product of the base and the height. Therefore, the base of this triangle must be 60/10 = 6 meters.
The area of any triangle is one-half the product of (base times height). Perhaps you can work it out from there.
The area of any triangle is 1/2 the product of its base and its height.Since you know both the base and height of your triangle, the way towork out its area is to multiply them and then take 1/2 of their product.
If you only have the triangle's area, then you only know the product of (base times height) ... it's double the area ... but you can't tell what either of those individual lengths is.
You can't tell from the information you have. There are an infinite number of triangles, with different areas, that all have the same sum of (base + height). The area of the triangle is (1/2) times (base) times (height). You need the product of (base) times (height). If you only know their sum, you have no way to find their product.
The area of a triangle is one-half the product of the base and the height. Therefore, the base of this triangle must be 60/10 = 6 meters.
The area of any triangle is one-half the product of (base times height). Perhaps you can work it out from there.
yes
The area of any triangle is 1/2 the product of its base and its height.Since you know both the base and height of your triangle, the way towork out its area is to multiply them and then take 1/2 of their product.
It's 1/2 the product of (the base) times (the height).
To find the area of a triangle, you have to multiply the base of the triangle and the height of the triangle, then divide the product of those numbers by two.
Area of a triangle = base * height / 2 Therefore the base = Area * 2 / height
The area of every triangle is 1/2 of the product of (length of its base times its height).You can probably take it from there.
If you only have the triangle's area, then you only know the product of (base times height) ... it's double the area ... but you can't tell what either of those individual lengths is.
Base could be 8, and height could be 4. Area for a triangle is 1/2 * base * height. 1/2 * base * height = 16 base * height = 32 Any two factors will work as long as the product is 32.
The relation between the height of a triangle, its base and its area is given by: Area = 0.5 * Base * Height Therefore, we have: Height = (2 * Area)/ Base.
Because the area of a triangle = 0.5*base*height