A hexagon has more vertices.
No, a square is a quadrilateral, and a hexagon has six sides, hense, hex meaning six, and a square is a quadrilateral, quad meaning four.
Well basically yeah it kinda is. A hexagon is A six sided figure. We know that many geometric buildings contains triangles. When a hexagon is cut into two it is a trapezoid. when that is cut into two in is a triangle. a hexagon is basically a lot of triangles stuck together. We all know that i triangle can't be stronger than two or more. so what do you think is stronger, a triangle or a hexagon. * * * * * The answer will depend on what you mean by "strongest" but the above answer is just a load of garbage! Any polygon with four or more sides is not rigid. It can be skewed in the same way that a square can be flexed so that it becomes a rhombus. The only rigid polygon is a triangle. That is one reason why triangles are used in structures and also why rectangles (or similar shapes) need to be cross-braced.
six
Why
a non rigid is a square and a hexagon
No
No.
It is a 2D shape
Triangle: The other shapes have an even number of sides. Square: The numbers of sides on the other two is divisible by 3 Hexagon: For sides of a fixed length, the other two shapes are rigid structures (the square can distort to a rhombus but then it is no longer a square.) or Triangle: It can have all acute angles. Square: It can (must ) have all right angles. Hexagon: It can have all obtuse angles.
A hexagon has six, a square has four.
No. A triangle is the only rigid polygon.
Not if the hexagon is a regular hexagon with sides of the same length as the sides of the square.
A square has 4 side, a pentagon has 5, and a hexagon has 6.
No because a hexagon has 6 sides whereas a square has only 4 sides
A square has 4 sides wheras an hexagon has 6 sides
yes it can if your hexagon is bigger