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.
hypotenuse
hyputenus,hyputenus
That is it. Just the hypotenuse - provided you have the correct triangle.
right triangle
Distance * Weight (in Newton meters)
hypotenuse
hypotenuse
Its hypotenuse
The hypotenuse
hypotenuse.
hypotenuse.
hyputenus,hyputenus
That is it. Just the hypotenuse - provided you have the correct triangle.
Yes when finding the lengths of lines on the Cartesian plane
Distance*speed divided by time
Use the distance formula to calculate the distances between the three vertices. If they are all different, the triangle is scalene, if only two are the same, the triangle is isosceles, and if they are all the same, the triangle is equilateral.
right triangle