A degree is usually a division of a measure between two fixed points. Sometimes, as in the case of temperature scales, it is between two arbitrary points. In others, such as angular displacement, it is a subdivision of a turn.
There are 540 degrees in a five sided figure.
There are 900 degrees in a seven sided figure!!
Rotating a figure 270 degrees is like rotating the figure to the left 90 degrees. I am not sure what formula or rule you use. *Joe Jonas Rocks*
360 degrees
1,800 degrees.
360 degrees
540 degrees.
270 degrees is 3/4 of the way around the circle. Ir is the same as rotating it 90 degrees (1/4) of the way clockwise. Turn it so anything that was pointing straight up would be pointing to the right.
No. The sum of the interior angles of any figure is [ 180 degrees x (2 less than the number of sides) ]. Any triangle . . . 180 degrees Any 4-sided figure, including a rhombus . . . 360 degrees Any 5-sided figure . . . 540 degrees Any 6-sided figure . . . 720 degrees . . . etc.
To rotate a figure 270 degrees counterclockwise about the origin, you can achieve this by rotating it 90 degrees clockwise, as 270 degrees counterclockwise is equivalent to 90 degrees clockwise. For each point (x, y) of the figure, the new coordinates after the rotation will be (y, -x). This transformation effectively shifts the figure to its new orientation while maintaining its shape and size.
120 degrees The way to figure any polygon is to draw diagonals from one of the vertexes to all the others and count the triangles. A 6 sided figure has 4 triangles. 4 times 180 = 720 total degrees. Divide that by 6 and you have 120.
There are 360 degrees at the centre of any figure.