hypotenuese
Yes, the Euclidean distance is the length of the hypotenuse of the right angled triangle whose other two vertices are at the two given points.
hyputenus,hyputenus
An isosceles triangle has to have two sides of equal length. An isosceles triangle has to have two sides of equal length.
If the "length" of this triangle is the distance from the base to the vertex of the two other sides, it is 100 units^2. (1/2*10*20) if the 'length' is not the aforementioned distance, you do not have enough information.
An isoceles triangle has TWO sides of equal length but an equilateral triangle has THREE sides of equal length
Not necessarily. The longest distance between two points in a triangle is the distance between the vertices that are farthest apart. This can be between any two vertices, not just those connected by the longest side of the triangle.
Yes, the Euclidean distance is the length of the hypotenuse of the right angled triangle whose other two vertices are at the two given points.
We use the distance formula to find the distance between the points (2,3) and (3,0) The distance is Square root of ((3^2+(2-3)^2)= Square root of (9+1) Which is square root of 10. This is the distance. This works because if we draw a triangle with one side having length 3 and another side having length 1, we have a right triangle. THis is because the side of length 3 is vertical and the side of length 1 is horizontal. Now the hypotenuse of this triangle is the line between the two points in question. So the length of the hypotenuse is the distance between the points. However, the pythagorean theorem tells us this distance is the square root of 1^2 +3^2=Square root of 10
The proper distance between two points in a three-dimensional space is the length of the straight line connecting the two points, also known as the Euclidean distance.
hyputenus,hyputenus
An isosceles triangle has to have two sides of equal length. An isosceles triangle has to have two sides of equal length.
If the "length" of this triangle is the distance from the base to the vertex of the two other sides, it is 100 units^2. (1/2*10*20) if the 'length' is not the aforementioned distance, you do not have enough information.
An isoceles triangle has TWO sides of equal length but an equilateral triangle has THREE sides of equal length
hypotenuse
hypotenuse
Its hypotenuse
The hypotenuse