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.
A shape that has two parallel lines and one perpendicular line is a right-angled triangle. In this triangle, one of the sides can be considered the base with the other being the height, which is perpendicular to the base. The two parallel lines can be imagined as the two sides of a right-angled triangle that are extended. Alternatively, this configuration can also represent a trapezoid if the opposite sides are parallel and one side is 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.
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 right angle is nothing bro, if you mean the area of a right angle triangle then uts simple formula is : 1/2×Base×Height(Perpendicular of the right angled triangle) Alternative method: Heron's formula!
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.