Yes, there can be oblique lines in a triangle. However, there can only be oblique lines in a triangle if the triangle is considered to be a 'right' triangle.
One's a triangle.
1) Place the object so that the view with the most detail is parallel to the picture plane, especially if the view consists of arcs and circles. 2) Place the object so that the longest dimension runs horizontally across the sheet. 3) In some cases the above two will conflict, and when this is so, rule #1 has preference as the advantage gained by having the irregular face without distortion is greater than gained by observing rule #2. 4) Decisions about viewing an object in oblique projection should aim to show the object so that its shape is most clearly presented and is conducive to showing its dimensions.
It is a 3D representation in two dimensions. Width and height are drawn on horizontal and vertical lines and depth is on an angled line, usually 30 or 45 degrees.
With high oblique photographs, you cannot see what is known as "dead ground" (parts of the area that are behind things like buildings and hills) And with low oblique photographs, you cannot see the horizon properly.
Isometric, orthographic and oblique drawings.
No.The definition of an oblique triangle is "any triangle that is not a right triangle".
One's a triangle.
Oblique lines:
No, oblique lines are neither parallel nor perpendicular
An oblique triangle has no right angle.
An oblique line can be diagonal, sloping or slanted. It is not vertical, horizontal, parallel or perpendicular.
mones douddd
An oblique triangle is any triangle that is not a right triangle. An oblique triangle could be either obtuse (having one side greater than 90 degrees) or acute. An acute triangle is one with all three angles less than 90 degrees. It cannot be obtuse, or right.
Two lines with a closing of to other lines like a box
W
asdasdas
The solutions do depend on what the questions are!