No; the tangent ratio only deals with the lengths of the opposite side and adjacent side. You can square the two sides and add them together, then find the square root of the sum to find the length of the hypotenuse.
tan-1(0.4877) = 25.99849161 or about 26 degrees
Tangent is the ratio between perpendicular to the base of the triangle.
It is a ratio of 0.4877 : nothing else.
The ratio of sine and cosine.
tan-1(0.6009) =31.0016578 degrees
Yes. The tan of 45 degrees is 1.
No; the tangent ratio only deals with the lengths of the opposite side and adjacent side. You can square the two sides and add them together, then find the square root of the sum to find the length of the hypotenuse.
tan-1(0.4877) = 25.99849161 or about 26 degrees
Oh, dude, the tangent of 42 degrees is like the ratio of the length of the opposite side to the adjacent side in a right triangle with a 42-degree angle. So, technically, it's the tangent of 42 degrees. But like, who really cares about tangents, am I right?
of what?
The tangent ratio for a right angle triangle is opposite/adjacent.
The tangent ratio can take any real value.
In a right angled triangle, it is the ratio of the lengths of the side opposite to the angle and the side adjacent to the angle.Of course, this definition restricts the function to (0, 90) degrees whereas the tangent function is defined for all real numbers.
The tangent is the ratio of sine over cosine; also, in a unit circle, Y over X.
Tangent is the ratio between perpendicular to the base of the triangle.
1.1519+k*pi radians or 66+180*k degrees for all integers k.