A diagonal in 2-dimensions, an edge or diagonal in 3-dimensions
A diagonal of a polyhedron is a line between any two vertices except outer vertices.
A diagonal.
A diagonal.
A line segment in a polygon connecting any two nonconsecutive vertices is called a diagonal.
2D shape
A line between two verticies is called a line segment.
A diagonal of a polyhedron is a line between any two vertices except outer vertices.
If between two adjacent vertices then in 2-dimensions it is a side, in 3-d and edge. If between non-adjacent vertices, a diagonal.
No, a diagonal is never a side of a polygon:A diagonal is a line between two non-adjacent vertices of a polygon;A side is a line between two adjacent vertices of a polygon.
The line is called a diagonal if it is drawn between two nonadjacent angles.
The locus of the points equidistant from any two points is a straight line. In a square when the points are two opposite vertices this line will pass trough the other two vertices - extending the diagonal between those other two vertices outside the square.
This is a diagonal line. The definition of a diagonal is a line that joins two nonconsecutive vertices or corners of a polygon.
A line between 2 vertices in Graph theory is called an edge or an arc, although arc is usually used to denote a directed edge.
A diagonal.
An edge is a line segment that connects two adjacent vertices. If the vertices are non-adjacent, the line segment is known as a diagonal.
To find the length of a line drawn between 2 vertices which are not next to each other, first draw a right triangle such that the line is the hypotenuse and the other two lines are drawn parallel to the x-axis and y-axis. Since the length of the other two lines are known, you can then calculate the hypotenuse to find the length of the line between the two vertices.
Opposite vertices are two vertices of any polygon with an even number of sides that have the same number of sides between them.