Height and degree only give the base in right triangles, because in that case you'd know angle-side-angle (because you know one is 90 degrees).
Well, it's just nice to know how tall your horse is. And also, some registries have strict regulations on height, so to see if your horse meets these regulations, you need to know his height.
anybody know what the height of a felmale panda is?
Height and diameter will give you the volume, if you know the density you can then calculate weight from that.
You will need to find what your height is before you can know what your average weight would be.
202 cm was the height os firon
You multiply the height and base then divide by 2.
area = 1/2 base * perpendicular height you can't find both the base and the height if you only know the area
Area = 0.5*base*height You will need to know the base or height then use Pythagoras theorem to find the base or height.
If you know the total area and the height are known, you can find the base. Area=(1/2)(base)(height), so if you know the height and area you can solve for the base. So now, Base=Area/(1/2)(height)
The base is one third of the perimeter, half of the base times the height is the area.
Do you know the formula for the area of a triangle ? Pick a base-length and a height for your triangle so that 1/2 (base x height) = 20. Do you know the formula for the area of a parallelogram ? Pick a base-length and a height for your parallelogram so that (base x height) = 20. We're having a problem understanding your difficulty. Of course, if you don't know the formulas for area . . .
Answer:We know that the area of the triangle is ½ *breadth *height.Given: The height of the triangle is 35 m and the base of the triangle is 26.5Therefore the area = ½ (26.5*35)= ½ (927.5)= 463.75Source: www.icoachmath.com
That's going to depend on how much you know about the other parts of the triangle. For example, if you know the area and the height, then Base = (double the area) divided by (height). If you don't know anything about the other parts to calculate the base with, then you just have to measure it.
No
You can't tell from the information you have. There are an infinite number of triangles, with different areas, that all have the same sum of (base + height). The area of the triangle is (1/2) times (base) times (height). You need the product of (base) times (height). If you only know their sum, you have no way to find their product.
If you only have the triangle's area, then you only know the product of (base times height) ... it's double the area ... but you can't tell what either of those individual lengths is.
It does not matter. Any side can be the base. Then, the height is the perpendicular distance between that side and the opposite vertex.