Unless you are given atleast 2 other angles, there is no way to find them out.
If you're only given the base, then you can't calculate the other leg. If you have any one of the following, then you can calculate all of the parts of the triangle: -- length of the other leg -- length of the hypotenuse -- size of either acute angle
Yes, the Euclidean distance is the length of the hypotenuse of the right angled triangle whose other two vertices are at the two given points.
Divide the length of a side of one triangle by the length of the corresponding side of the other triangle.
Do the pythagorean theorem. Its A squared plus B squared=C squared. Do that to figure out the other side of the triangle
Unless you are given atleast 2 other angles, there is no way to find them out.
If you're only given the base, then you can't calculate the other leg. If you have any one of the following, then you can calculate all of the parts of the triangle: -- length of the other leg -- length of the hypotenuse -- size of either acute angle
Yes, the Euclidean distance is the length of the hypotenuse of the right angled triangle whose other two vertices are at the two given points.
Given the lengths of two sides of a right triangle, you can find the length of the other side.
Divide the length of a side of one triangle by the length of the corresponding side of the other triangle.
Do the pythagorean theorem. Its A squared plus B squared=C squared. Do that to figure out the other side of the triangle
The length of the third side must be greater than the difference between the length of the two given sides and it must be less than the sum of the two given sides. These limits can be derived from the fact that any two sides of a triangle must have a combined length greater than the third side.
The other leg length is 16.
You cannot find any angle, or either of the other two sides, in a non-right triangle, when given only one side.
right triangle
No, because the biggest length (hypotenuse) has to be equal to the square root of the sum of the squares of the other two sides, which it is not
If you are only given the side lengths of a scalene triangle, it is impossible for you to find for the area, unless you are given more information... like the height of the triangle for example. If this is a right triangle you would like to find the area of, you can multiply the length of each leg with each other, and then divide that product by 2 to conclude the area of the triangle.