no it cannot represent as in angle triangle rule it doesnt prove that term
equi triangle
equilateral triangle
Perimeter of a triangle = (length of side #1) + (length of side #2) + (length of side #3)
equilateral triangle
no it cannot represent as in angle triangle rule it doesnt prove that term
They could be 3 cm by 4 cm by 5 cm for a right angle triangle.
They could all be the same length, or two of them could be the same, or they could all be different. In any case, when you add them all up, the number you get is called the "perimeter" of the triangle.
No. Due to Pythagoras' Theorem, the square of the hypotenuse (the longest side of the right triangle) has to be equal to the sum of the squares of the other two sides. If this is too wordy, call the sides a, b and c, where c is the hypotenuse. Then a2+b2=c2 for any right triangle. Hence, with 3, 6 and 8 we have 9+36=64 (or 36+9=64 depending on how you choose a and b) which is clearly wrong, so a triangle with sides of length 3, 6 and 8 is NOT a right triangle.
It is an equilateral triangle
equi triangle
equilateral triangle
2 Square Root 3 And 4
Perimeter of a triangle = (length of side #1) + (length of side #2) + (length of side #3)
If a triangle is on a flat surface and all of its sides are the same length, then all of its angles are 60 degrees. It doesn't matter what the actual length of the sides is. They could be 3 millimeters or 3 kilometers.
A triangle has 3 sides and so the length of bc will depend on its perimeter.
equilateral triangle