A hexagon has six sides. See the related link below for an image.
fIRST OF ALL A HEXAGON IS 2-D NOT 3-D
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The statement is not false. A hexagon is a polygon.
first divide the hexagon into three parts a rectangle and two triangles then try to findthe areas of all and then take individual heights and add them to get the height of the hexagon
A hexagon has six sides. See the related link below for an image.
The Greeks where the first to use the hexagon shape in building
fIRST OF ALL A HEXAGON IS 2-D NOT 3-D
IT LOOKs like a bottle
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The statement is not false. A hexagon is a polygon.
You can do that by simply proving that the hexagon is a regular hexagon. You could do this by dividing the hexagon into 6 equilateral triangles of the same size successfully that tesselate to form a hexagon, thus proving that all sides are equal.
first divide the hexagon into three parts a rectangle and two triangles then try to findthe areas of all and then take individual heights and add them to get the height of the hexagon
Area of first hexagon is (3/2) x sqrt(3) x s2 = 1623.75Area of second hexagon = 2/5 (1623.75) = 649.5Its side is about 15.81 units.
The first step when inscribing a square quadrilateral triangle or a hexagon in a circle is to connect the endpoints of the diameters to form a square.
No, because the browser does not allow diagrams.
Obviously homework, so I'll give you some pointers:Assuming it is a regular hexagon then:Draw in all three diagonals of the hexagon - this will split the hexagon into 6 equilateral triangles.Sum the areas of the triangles to give the area of the hexagon.Use Pythagoras or trigonometric ratios to find the altitude of the triangles; the base of the triangles is the length of the side of the hexagon.