A regular decagon has 10 equal sides.
Yes. A regular tessellation can be created from either an equilateral triangle, a square, or a hexagon.
In a normal plane, only regular polygons with interior angles that are a factor of 360o can be tessellated. This means only three shapes: the regular (equilateral) triangle, the regular quadrilateral (square) and the regular hexagon. If the line were considered a regular polygon (with only two sides) then it would also be included in this list.
Any polygon is regular if its sides are all the same length, or irregular if they're not. If all 10 sides of your decagon are the same length, then you have a regular decagon. If they're not, then you have an irregular one.
well the total degrees in a decagon is 1440 therefore each interior angle in a regular decagon would measure 144 degrese
No.
No.
A regular octagon will not tessellate but an irregular one can.
A regular decagon has 10 equal sides.
No because its angles are not factors of 360 degrees
Yes. A regular tessellation can be created from either an equilateral triangle, a square, or a hexagon.
A decagon is a 10 sided polygon
In a normal plane, only regular polygons with interior angles that are a factor of 360o can be tessellated. This means only three shapes: the regular (equilateral) triangle, the regular quadrilateral (square) and the regular hexagon. If the line were considered a regular polygon (with only two sides) then it would also be included in this list.
Not necessarily.
Any polygon is regular if its sides are all the same length, or irregular if they're not. If all 10 sides of your decagon are the same length, then you have a regular decagon. If they're not, then you have an irregular one.
well the total degrees in a decagon is 1440 therefore each interior angle in a regular decagon would measure 144 degrese
A regular decagon