The length of the other side is: 28.6 cm
Insufficient information. Is it a right triangle? And if so, which sides are the 7 and 3?
they are all the same length
Not enough information. If it's a right triangle, and the missing side is a leg, it could be 4 in. If the missing side is the hypotenuse, it would be the square root of 34.
To determine the length of the missing side of a triangle with sides measuring 9 cm and 12 cm, we can apply the triangle inequality theorem, which states that the sum of the lengths of any two sides must be greater than the length of the third side. Therefore, the missing side must be less than 21 cm (9 + 12) and greater than 3 cm (12 - 9). Without additional information, the exact length of the missing side cannot be determined, but it must fall within the range of 3 cm to 21 cm.
It is the same length as the corresponding side on the other triangle.
Hhj
3 hight
yes
Sorry wrong question
The length of the other side is: 28.6 cm
Insufficient information. Is it a right triangle? And if so, which sides are the 7 and 3?
You use the pythagorean theorem.
they are all the same length
To create a triangle, the sum of the two shorter sides must be greater than the third side. If the side of length 13 is the longest side then the missing side must be greater than 13 - 5 = 8 If the missing side is the longest side then the missing side must be less than 13 + 5 = 18 Thus any length that is greater than 8 and less than 18 Examples include: 9, 12, 17 If the third side is 12, the triangle is a Pythagorean triangle.
Not enough information. If it's a right triangle, and the missing side is a leg, it could be 4 in. If the missing side is the hypotenuse, it would be the square root of 34.
Because there is no information on which side is the hypotenuse, there is not a unique answer. The hypotenuse can either be the missing side or c. If the hypotenuse is the missing side, then it has a length of sqrt(2594) = 50.93133 units. If c is the hypotenuse the missing side is 12 units long.