Area = base x altitude /2 so base = 2 x area/altitude = 64/6 = 10 & 2/3 cm.
I think you need at least one other piece of information. A length of a side? An angle? Is it a right angled triangle?
Find the length of the base and the perpendicular height. Multiply together. Divide answer by 2. Area of Triangle = ½(Base x Perpendicular Height) For right angled triangles, take the length of the two shortest sides, multiply them together and divide the answer by two.
No. 1/2 base squared + height squared=side squared on an equilateral triangle.
Sum of exterior angles: 360 degrees Sum of interior angles: 180 degrees The square of its hypotenuse is equal to the sum of its base squared plus its height squared.
As with all triangles: base x height ------------------ 2 Base is one side of the triangle, and height is a line drawn perpendicular from it to the opposite vertice (corner). If you want to get into Trigonometry, there's another way, but I forget it. Sorry.
1/2*base of triangle*height(the perpendicular)=Area of right angled triangle
The squared area of a triangle is half of its base times its perpendicular height. Or as: 0.5*base*perpendicular height = area of a triangle
Really you don't have enough data to calculate this.The height is not necessarily one of the three sides. The height is perpendicular to the width.If the triangle has a right angle, and you know two of the sides, you can calculate the third side using the rule of Pythagoras (a squared + b squared = c squared).Really you don't have enough data to calculate this.The height is not necessarily one of the three sides. The height is perpendicular to the width.If the triangle has a right angle, and you know two of the sides, you can calculate the third side using the rule of Pythagoras (a squared + b squared = c squared).Really you don't have enough data to calculate this.The height is not necessarily one of the three sides. The height is perpendicular to the width.If the triangle has a right angle, and you know two of the sides, you can calculate the third side using the rule of Pythagoras (a squared + b squared = c squared).Really you don't have enough data to calculate this.The height is not necessarily one of the three sides. The height is perpendicular to the width.If the triangle has a right angle, and you know two of the sides, you can calculate the third side using the rule of Pythagoras (a squared + b squared = c squared).
I think you need at least one other piece of information. A length of a side? An angle? Is it a right angled triangle?
Find the length of the base and the perpendicular height. Multiply together. Divide answer by 2. Area of Triangle = ½(Base x Perpendicular Height) For right angled triangles, take the length of the two shortest sides, multiply them together and divide the answer by two.
For all triangles, right-angled included, it is the multiplication of the base length times the perpendicular height x half. Algebraically A = 0.5bh For a right-angled triangle it is the base length times to length of right angled (perpendicular) line times one half.
The area of a triangle is (1/2) base times height; the height must be perpendicular to the base.The area of a triangle is (1/2) base times height; the height must be perpendicular to the base.The area of a triangle is (1/2) base times height; the height must be perpendicular to the base.The area of a triangle is (1/2) base times height; the height must be perpendicular to the base.
No. 1/2 base squared + height squared=side squared on an equilateral triangle.
Sum of exterior angles: 360 degrees Sum of interior angles: 180 degrees The square of its hypotenuse is equal to the sum of its base squared plus its height squared.
As with all triangles: base x height ------------------ 2 Base is one side of the triangle, and height is a line drawn perpendicular from it to the opposite vertice (corner). If you want to get into Trigonometry, there's another way, but I forget it. Sorry.
multiply the base of the triangle by the height then halve the answer.
An isosceles, possibly equilateral, triangle