Puzzle time - A little basic geometry
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wrote on 28 Nov 2020, 00:26 last edited by
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wrote on 28 Nov 2020, 01:50 last edited by jon-nyc
||Let x and y be the segments of the bottom side of the triangle to the left and right of the squares respectively.
Tan60=a/x
Tan60=3a/yx=a/tan60
y=3a/tan606a + 4a/tan60 = 1
8.309a=1a= ~0.12||
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wrote on 28 Nov 2020, 04:28 last edited by
||I had wanted to solve it without using trigonometry, and found that I had to resort to using the Pythagorean theorem to find the ratio of a/x, which is what tan(60°)=sqrt(3) is anyway. I ended up with a=1/(6+4/sqrt(3))≈0.12||
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||I had wanted to solve it without using trigonometry, and found that I had to resort to using the Pythagorean theorem to find the ratio of a/x, which is what tan(60°)=sqrt(3) is anyway. I ended up with a=1/(6+4/sqrt(3))≈0.12||
wrote on 28 Nov 2020, 12:54 last edited by@Axtremus said in Puzzle time - A little basic geometry:
I had to resort to using the Pythagorean theorem
Picking a nit here, but you assume that the lines intersect at right angles. That's not stated in the diagram, is it? It's an assumption on your part.
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@Axtremus said in Puzzle time - A little basic geometry:
I had to resort to using the Pythagorean theorem
Picking a nit here, but you assume that the lines intersect at right angles. That's not stated in the diagram, is it? It's an assumption on your part.
wrote on 28 Nov 2020, 13:05 last edited by@George-K said in Puzzle time - A little basic geometry:
@Axtremus said in Puzzle time - A little basic geometry:
I had to resort to using the Pythagorean theorem
Picking a nit here, but you assume that the lines intersect at right angles. That's not stated in the diagram, is it? It's an assumption on your part.
True, but if the lines do not intersect at right angles, then even the trigonometric functions would not be applicable, i.e., using the Pythagorean theorem is not any “more wrong” than using a trigonometric function in this case.
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@George-K said in Puzzle time - A little basic geometry:
@Axtremus said in Puzzle time - A little basic geometry:
I had to resort to using the Pythagorean theorem
Picking a nit here, but you assume that the lines intersect at right angles. That's not stated in the diagram, is it? It's an assumption on your part.
True, but if the lines do not intersect at right angles, then even the trigonometric functions would not be applicable, i.e., using the Pythagorean theorem is not any “more wrong” than using a trigonometric function in this case.
wrote on 28 Nov 2020, 13:12 last edited by@Axtremus said in Puzzle time - A little basic geometry:
True, but if the lines do not intersect at right angles, then even the trigonometric functions would not be applicable
That's right. I'm just being an asshole here....
||@jon-nyc would add "again."||
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wrote on 28 Nov 2020, 13:13 last edited by
Both Ax and Jon solved the puzzle successfully! Well done!