Whether or not hey are the same, they are not hexagons.
The first one that comes to mind is the Star of David (Jewish Star).
potato
regular hexagon, or Star of David
Yes: First drawer a Hexagon (6 sided figure), as you complete the last side, continue around the outside adding the "points" of the star (forming triangles at each side of the Hexagon), and thus completing the Star
i don't know who designed it, but all I know is that the pentagon is known as King Solomon's seal. Then the hexagon is the star of David.
In 3d a hexagonal pyramid. In 2d, two hexagons. Or a six-pointed star (like a Star of David), a parallelogram plus lots more possibilities
A Star of David can be as large or small as a person wants. There are no "exact" proportions of the star, but all sides of the central hexagon should be equal as should the triangles be.
In 3d a hexagonal pyramid. In 2d, two hexagons. Or a six-pointed star (like a Star of David), a parallelogram plus lots more possibilities
With 6 equilateral triangles oriented with a point from each touching in the center of the imagined hexagon, you would have a hexagon. The following would make a 6 pointed star which is not a hexagon because it would have 12 edges: "It takes 2 triangles to make a hexagon. Take one triangle, put a side of it flat down, take a second triangle, and put its point downwards and overlap it with the 1st triangle. Hint; It should make a Star of David. Hope this helped."
Anything with 6 sides is a hexagon.
A hexagram is a six-pointed star, made from two overlapping triangles, one point upwards, the other point downwards. When the two overlapping triangles are both equilateral and the exact same size, then the symbol is also known as the Star of David.
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