if you are talking about the triangle rule as in angles, the triangle rule is that all the interior ( on the inside) angles always add up to 180 degrees. The exterior (on the outside) angles always add up to 360 degrees
To find the location of the resultant, you can use the parallelogram rule or the triangle rule of vector addition. Locate the endpoints of the vectors you are adding, draw the resultant vector connecting the initial point of the first vector to the terminal point of the last vector, and then find the coordinates of the endpoint of the resultant vector.
Two or more velocities can be added vectorially by considering both magnitude and direction. To find the resultant velocity, you can use the parallelogram rule or the triangle rule, depending on the direction of the velocities. Alternatively, you can find the components of each velocity and add the components separately to determine the resultant velocity.
A scalar triangle is a triangle in which all sides have different lengths. To construct a scalar triangle, start by drawing three non-collinear points that will represent the vertices of the triangle. Then, connect the points with straight lines to form the sides of the triangle such that no two sides are of the same length.
The maximum angle that can be achieved in a triangle is 180 degrees.
The triangle produces a high-pitched ringing sound when struck. The pitch of the sound can vary depending on the size of the triangle and the material it's made of.
there are 3 angles in a triangle which is mathematically true if you check in the math rule book and rule determined by Andres Schavascapel
Pascal's rule for his triangle pattern is all the sides are ones
There is no rule for the perimeter of an acute triangle. You simply need to add the sides.
There is no single rule. It is a right angled isosceles triangle. Its long side (hypotenuse) is sqrt(2) times the short sides.
Pythagoras's' theorem or "got an want" on a right angled triangle but use sine rule on a non right angled triangle !! ..
You find the perimeter of a triangle by adding all the sides. There is no special rule for finding the perimeter.
small green triangle
Pythagoras's Rule does not work if the triangle is not a right angle triangle, that is having one angle equal to 90 degrees. (The rule can still be applied by creating right angles along one or more sides, using lines perpendicular to the side.)
The answer depends on the information that you have: it could be the sine rule or the cosine rule.
Using the cosine rule: 13.0112367 cm The triangle is in fact an isosceles triangle.
If you know the lengths of the sides, you can use the cosine rule. If you have information about other aspects of the triangle, then other formulae will apply.
no it cannot represent as in angle triangle rule it doesnt prove that term