It is indeterminate. More information is required.
Is indeterminate.
Are of a triangle is (length of the base) times (height)/2 .
The 'base' is the length of the side that the triangle is standing on.The 'height' is the vertical distance from that line to the vertex atthe top of the triangle.
The square of the length of the base plus the square of the length of the height will equal the square of the length of the hypotenuse of your right triangle, per Pythagoras. Square the hypotenuse, subtract the square of the height, and then find the positive square root of that and you'll have the base of your right triangle.
The answer depends on whether the base is one of the legs of the right angle or the hypotenuse. Also, a triangle cannot have a diagonal.
The first is clearly not a suitable triangle.
The measurement of the angle of the triangle...supposing it is a triangle.
The area of any triangle is 1/2 of (length of the base) multiplied by (the height).Perhaps you can handle it from there.
The area of a triangle is (1/2) x (length of the base) x (height of the triangle). You ought to be able to handle it from this point.
The area of a triangle is (1/2) x (length of the base) x (height of the triangle). You ought to be able to handle it from this point.
The length of the hypotenuse of a right triangle with a 13 cm base and a 6 cm height is 14.32 cm
The length of the hypotenuse of a right triangle that has a base of 3 feet and a height of 12 feet is: 12.37 feet.