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.
Oh, dude, an equilateral triangle has 3 vertices, 3 faces (which are also the sides), and 3 edges. It's like the most balanced shape ever, so chill.
There are no 'diagonals' in a triangle. Each vertex is connected to both of the other vertices, by the sides.
No. and it is not vertices's! vertices will do.
The shapes that have 3 sides and 3 vertices are called triangles. Triangles are classified based on the lengths of their sides and the measures of their angles. The three most common types of triangles are equilateral triangles (all sides and angles are equal), isosceles triangles (two sides and two angles are equal), and scalene triangles (all sides and angles are different).
isosceles
An isosceles triangle and an equilateral triangle both have three vertices.
3 vertices in a triangle, whether it is equilateral, isosceles or scalene; acute angled, right or obtuse.
An isosceles triangle and an equilateral triangle
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.
isosceles
3 vertices
An Isosceles triangle, like all triangles has three vertices (corners).
Yes like all other triangles it has 3 vertices.
An equilateral triangle has 3 lines of symmetry which perpendicularly bisects each of its vertices
Tetrahedron: 4 equilateral triangle faces and 4 vertices.
All triangles have three vertices.