15/7 is in its simplest form.
Yes. What you should watch out for is that, to form a triangle, none of the segments should be longer (or as long as) the other two segments combined. Just check whether the longest segment is longer than the sum of the other two - if it is, then you can't form a triangle.
7/15 is in its simplest form.
Since the numerator of the fraction is prime, the proper fraction 7/15 is already written in its simplest form.
fraction: 7/15 decimal:0.4666666666666667
Those segments can form a triangle because the two smallest sides, 7 and 8, add together to make 15, which is greater than the longest side, 12.
Yes they could.
The exchange of segments is called translocation.
Yes.
15/7 is in its simplest form.
Yes. What you should watch out for is that, to form a triangle, none of the segments should be longer (or as long as) the other two segments combined. Just check whether the longest segment is longer than the sum of the other two - if it is, then you can't form a triangle.
7/15 in decimal form = 0.4666...7/15:= 7 ÷ 15= 0.4666... in decimal
7/15 is in its simplest form.
7/15 is in its simplest form.
Since the numerator of the fraction is prime, the proper fraction 7/15 is already written in its simplest form.
fraction: 7/15 decimal:0.4666666666666667
7/15 is in its simplest form.