|
Post by Geekthras (The Gizmo of Yore) on May 15, 2006 15:43:26 GMT -5
Come here to talk about any math or geometry things that you've done or want to find out about! Recently, I made a paper truncated tetrahedron and a rhombicuboctohedron(sp?) and I'm working on a snub cube. Anyone else make that kind of thing?
-G2-
|
|
|
Post by Blastgirl on May 15, 2006 18:11:28 GMT -5
I am very poor with geometric terms. I know that a right angle is ninety degrees and a circle is three-hundred and sixty degrees.
Other than that I'm pretty clueless about geometric terms.
I would love to see whatever projects you wish to share with us though.
|
|
|
Post by slippy0 on May 15, 2006 18:16:33 GMT -5
Here's one that took me and my friend a year to solve (and we still don't know if we're right) find the angle x one e-cookie to who ever solves it (BTW, guess and check doesn't work)
|
|
|
Post by Captain Awesome on May 15, 2006 18:38:20 GMT -5
Are we finding angles? I assume we are, since your drawing would be horribly not-to-scale otherwise. ...as opposed to being just medium-ish-ly not-to-scale now.
|
|
|
Post by Blastgirl on May 15, 2006 20:43:14 GMT -5
I don't really get it though what are you suppose to figure out?
|
|
|
Post by slippy0 on May 15, 2006 21:23:19 GMT -5
Are we finding angles? I assume we are, since your drawing would be horribly not-to-scale otherwise. ...as opposed to being just medium-ish-ly not-to-scale now. yah, I'm just used to stuff like this being assumed. Doesn't matter, no one will get the right answer anyways
|
|
|
Post by kankles on May 15, 2006 21:31:38 GMT -5
OK, this is killing me. ? ya ty 4 chk, ttyl -tmtigd
|
|
|
Post by Classicblast on May 15, 2006 22:07:24 GMT -5
tmtd, your account is unlocked. You should be able to log in now.
|
|
|
Post by im_an_alien on May 16, 2006 6:25:19 GMT -5
I took the end of course test for Geometry yesturday
|
|
|
Post by slippy0 on May 16, 2006 6:29:18 GMT -5
OK, this is killing me. ? ya ty 4 chk, ttyl -tmtigd no
|
|
|
Post by Vanilla Ice on May 16, 2006 7:39:51 GMT -5
Just now I realize how many things don't add up to 180 nor 260 360.
|
|
|
Post by slippy0 on May 16, 2006 17:29:22 GMT -5
heh, wanna no something weird? you can input any number (from 0 to 130) for x, and all the angles will add up with no problem, but logically, there is only one possible angle (just believe me if you can't tell why).
|
|
|
Post by Vanilla Ice on May 16, 2006 17:38:52 GMT -5
The bottom traingle is semetrical, and the two on to of it are basically the same thing. Their top point (This point is part of X's angle), can only align into one spot, this dependant upon the angle of the "10" and "20"
I don't really know the equation for this, I haven't really done a lot of geometry.
|
|
|
Post by roflstunts on May 16, 2006 18:23:00 GMT -5
?
|
|
|
Post by slippy0 on May 16, 2006 19:05:58 GMT -5
The bottom traingle is semetrical, and the two on to of it are basically the same thing. Their top point (This point is part of X's angle), can only align into one spot, this dependant upon the angle of the "10" and "20" I don't really know the equation for this, I haven't really done a lot of geometry. more or less, yah. As for taking geometry, I havn't taken it at all yet, I just studied off the internet ;D (though I did study with a friend in it, so I know the entire course before I do anything...) stuntsWell, though I can't 100% say thats wrong, my work comes up otherwise (btw, my work is exessivly ugly, and I quite possible carried something wrong). how did you get that answer, stunts?
|
|
|
Post by Geekthras (The Gizmo of Yore) on May 16, 2006 19:22:15 GMT -5
I know that it is possible to solve, but I do not have it yet. I'll post it later. I used trig though.
-G2-
|
|
|
Post by roflstunts on May 16, 2006 19:31:01 GMT -5
how did you get that answer, stunts? I...don't quite know. I went off the fact that the vertex at the middle of the whole drawing has a somewhat 90 degree angle on the left, so I went off of that. The problem isn't wrong, I checked the addition of the angles; but I can't say it's the only right conclusion either. This is a tought one, slippy. You can basically put any number there, like you said. So this isn't an "x = 70" problem, more of a "x = {n,n,n,n...}" problem.
|
|
|
Post by im_an_alien on May 16, 2006 20:16:58 GMT -5
My geometry teacher said to "never trust thee diagram". Basically what it means is you have to look at the numbers and stuff, you can't just go on what it looks like. "not drawn to scale"
And also, I think you should add another number or two so you can only have one answer
|
|