A hexagon cannot have a sum. There can be the sum of its interior angles, its exterior angles, its side lengths, its area (and that of some other area), or other characteristics, but not of a hexagon.
Only if all the angles and side lengths are the same.
The area of a regular hexagon with side lengths of 10 units is about 259.8 units2
All hexagons have six sides.If the six sides are of the same length and the angles formed by the six intersections of these lines are all identical, then it is a special hexagon called a regular hexagon.If any of the sides is a different length than any other side or if any of the angles are a different size than any of the others, the hexagon is called an irregular hexagon.
They have obtuse angles on each side.
A hexagon cannot have a sum. There can be the sum of its interior angles, its exterior angles, its side lengths, its area (and that of some other area), or other characteristics, but not of a hexagon.
This cannot be answered without any given side lengths, since the interior angles of an irregular hexagon are different. Only the angles of a regular hexagon can be found without side lengths, and that is 120 degrees per angle.
Only if all the angles and side lengths are the same.
The area of a regular hexagon with side lengths of 8cm is about 166.3cm2
The area of a regular hexagon with side lengths of 10 units is about 259.8 units2
All hexagons have six sides.If the six sides are of the same length and the angles formed by the six intersections of these lines are all identical, then it is a special hexagon called a regular hexagon.If any of the sides is a different length than any other side or if any of the angles are a different size than any of the others, the hexagon is called an irregular hexagon.
nonregular hexagon. a regular polygon has equal side lengths and equal angle measures.
what is the area of a regular hexagon with sides lengths of 12 inches long
They have obtuse angles on each side.
No. Angles don't have anything called a side length. However, one can use trigonometry to compute the angles of a triangle based on the side lengths of the triangle (triangles do have side lengths).
No, for a polygon to be regular it must have equal side lengths and angles.
Hexagons are six-sided shapes. In a regular hexagon the angles and the sides are the same. The best example is the honeycomb of a beehive. An irregular hexagon can have any combination of side lengths that result in a closed figure of six sides.