All triangles have 3 sides and 3 inside angles that add up to 180 degrees
The scale factor of triangle ABC to triangle XYZ can be determined by comparing the lengths of corresponding sides of the two triangles. To find the scale factor, divide the length of a side in triangle ABC by the length of the corresponding side in triangle XYZ. If all corresponding sides have the same ratio, that ratio is the scale factor for the triangles.
A triangle - any triangle - has 3 sides.
A triangle has three sides !
1:1.5
A triangle has 3 sides and no vertices.
An isosceles triangle is a triangle that has two sides of equal length.
The scale factor of triangle ABC to triangle XYZ can be determined by comparing the lengths of corresponding sides of the two triangles. To find the scale factor, divide the length of a side in triangle ABC by the length of the corresponding side in triangle XYZ. If all corresponding sides have the same ratio, that ratio is the scale factor for the triangles.
A triangle has three sides.
A triangle - any triangle - has 3 sides.
A triangle has three sides.
A triangle has three sides !
1:1.5
It is difficult to tell exactly what the question means - thanks to the spelling - but the answer is probably three.
A triangle has got 3 sides to it & that's why it's called a triangle. Three sides.
By definition, a triangle has three sides.
A triangle has 3 sides and no vertices.
To determine the scale factor of triangle ABC to triangle DEF, you need to compare corresponding side lengths of both triangles. If the sides of triangle ABC are twice the length of the corresponding sides of triangle DEF, the scale factor would be 2. If they are three times longer, the scale factor would be 3. Similarly, if the sides of triangle DEF are longer, a scale factor of one third would apply. Without specific side length measurements, the exact scale factor cannot be determined.