I really don't know
The coordinates are the vertices of a triangle since they form three points.
SSS
The CIRCUMCENTER would be the correct fill in the blank for apex 2022 good luck
A triangle cannot be formed by any number of trapezoids. Every time a trapezoid is stretched across one side of a triangle, a smaller triangle similar to the first is formed by the part not covered by the trapezoid. Unless... the triangle was equilateral and the trapezoids were isoceles. You could fill the triangle with 3 trapezoids as follows: Use the longer 'bottom' edge of each trapezoid and the 'left' edge of the next trapezoid to make up the edge of the triangle. The shorter 'top' edge of the trapezoids touch the 'right' edge of the next trapezoid in the center of the triangle.
You can use matrices to find the area of the triangle.Find the three coordinates of the scalene triangle.(x1,y1)(x2, y2)(x3, y3).Then you substitute these numbers into this 3X3 matrix.x1 y1 1x2 y2 1x3 y3 1Find the determinant of this matrix.Then halve this answer and make it positive.This is your area of the triangle.The area of any triangle is: 0.5*base*perpendicular height
The coordinates of the centroid relate to the average of coordinates of the triangle's vertices. Free online calculation tool - mathopenref.com/coordcentroid.html
The answer depends on what you mean by "the verticals of a triangle".
If by sperical triangle you mean a triangle on the surface of a sphere, you will need 3 dimensional coordinate geometry. Whether you use polar coordinates or linear coordinates will depend on what you want to "solve".
The coordinates are the vertices of a triangle since they form three points.
That depends on where the triangle ABC is located on the Cartesian plane for the coordinates of its vertices to be determined.
a circle
Find the coordinates of the vertices of triangle a'b'c' after triangle ABC is dilated using the given scale factor then graph triangle ABC and its dilation A (1,1) B(1,3) C(3,1) scale factor 3
Not too sure of the question but if A is (1, 2) and B is (-3, -1) then it is a right angle triangle if the coordinates of C are at (1, -1) or (-3, 2)
how the hell do you even find the centroid of a triangle to begin with, that's what i want to know!
All you have to do is add the numbers and determine how much the numbers change. In your case, the new coordinates are (0, -1), (4, -2), (2, -6).
you cannot because a triangle has verticles and a circle does not
That would depend on its original coordinates and in which direction clockwise or anti clockwise of which information has not been given.