It is an isosceles triangle. 45 + 45 + 90 = 180 degrees
Well, it doesn't exactly have "an angle that measures 45 and 90 degrees". It has one angle that measures 45 degrees, and another angle that measures 90 degrees. That's an isosceles right triangle. The third angle is also 45 degrees, and the length of each leg is 70.7% of the length of the hypotenuse. .
I assume you mean a triangle. 180 degrees - 45 degrees - 90 degrees = 45 degrees
Right triangles.
They are: 45, 45 and 90 degrees
It is an isosceles triangle. 45 + 45 + 90 = 180 degrees
Well, it doesn't exactly have "an angle that measures 45 and 90 degrees". It has one angle that measures 45 degrees, and another angle that measures 90 degrees. That's an isosceles right triangle. The third angle is also 45 degrees, and the length of each leg is 70.7% of the length of the hypotenuse. .
I assume you mean a triangle. 180 degrees - 45 degrees - 90 degrees = 45 degrees
Right triangles.
They are: 45, 45 and 90 degrees
45, 45 and 90 degrees
Any triangle that has an angle measuring 90 degrees is a right triangle.
As many as you like because any triangle that has a 90 degree angle is always a right angle triangle.
we know that a triangle is 90 degrees by measuring its length or it can be known as right triangle which measures 90 degrees.
If two angles of a triangle each measure 45 degrees, the third angle measures 90 degrees. This is because of the Triangle Sum Theorem - The sum of the measure of the interior angles of a triangle is 180 degrees. If you know that two of the angles total to be 90 degrees, you can subtract that 90 degrees from the total 180. The result is 90 degrees.
They are: 90 degrees, 45 degrees and 45 degrees
No. To be a "right" triangle, one angle has to be 90 degrees, but the other two angles can be anything as long as the measures of all three angles add up to 180 degrees. For example, you can have a 45 - 45 - 90 right triangle.