Triangles
Three-sided polygons with rich properties connecting angles, sides, area, and similarity.
Definition
A triangle is a closed shape with exactly three straight sides and three angles. The three angles always add up to exactly .
Triangles are classified by their sides:
- Equilateral: all three sides equal, all three angles
- Isosceles: two sides equal, the two base angles equal
- Scalene: all three sides different
And by their angles:
- Acute: all angles less than
- Right: one angle exactly
- Obtuse: one angle greater than
In a right triangle, the longest side (opposite the right angle) is the hypotenuse. The Pythagorean theorem: .
Key properties
- Angles always sum to — no exceptions in flat (Euclidean) geometry
- The longest side is always opposite the largest angle
- Triangle inequality: each side must be shorter than the sum of the other two
- An exterior angle equals the sum of the two non-adjacent interior angles
Angles in a triangle
A triangle has angles and . Find the third angle.
Common mistakes
- Assuming right angle: not every triangle has a angle — check before applying
- Triangle inequality: three lengths don't always form a triangle — e.g. , , cannot
Try it
An isosceles triangle has one angle of at the apex. Find the two base angles.
Solution
The two base angles are equal. Let each be .
, so , giving .