other side is 4, hypotenuse is 5
The only thing that can be said about consecutive sides of a quadrilateral is that they meet at a vertex. There is no restriction on the angle, nor on their respective lengths.
There is only one equilateral triangle with a perimeter of 60 units. Its side lengths are integers.
9 is shortest integer side length greater than 17/2
You look at the lengths of the sided of the triangle. If the two lengths are same, the triangle is an isosceles triangle. If all the lengths are same, the triangle is an equilateral triangle. If none of the lengths are same, the triangle is a scalene triangle.
Well the fractional lengths is the length of a fraction
10
a rectangle (that is NOT a square) has 4 right angles and consecutive sides of unequal lengths.
The only thing that can be said about consecutive sides of a quadrilateral is that they meet at a vertex. There is no restriction on the angle, nor on their respective lengths.
Pythagorean triplets.
There is only one equilateral triangle with a perimeter of 60 units. Its side lengths are integers.
A parallelogram with sides whose lengths are half the diagonals of the original quadrilateral.
47, 48, and 49
My friend, you just said the height. :P You just said that it is a 40 feet high cube. Since a cube has equal lengths all over, the width would obviously be 40 feet as well.
The sum of the lengths of two sides of a triangle must be greater than the length of the third so the following eight triangles will do: (1,8,8), (2,7,8), (3,6,8), (3,7,7), (4,5,8), (4,6,7), (5,5,7) and (5,6,6).
9 is shortest integer side length greater than 17/2
There are infinitely many triplets, and in general, they do not have a name. If all three are integers, then they are known as Pythagorean triplets.
The pathagoren theorm states that a2+ b2 = c2. If you put your lenghts into the equation and it comes out true (100=100), then the triangle is a right trianlge. If it is a false equation (100=30), then it is not a right triangle. Where a = lenght of leg 1, b = lenght of leg 2, and c = lenght of hypotenuse.