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Can this be used as a proof? (1 Viewer)

nightweaver066

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If i had this,



Can i prove that those two lines are parallel simply by using the converse of ratio of intercepts on parallel lines? Or do i have to prove similarity and then prove that they are parallel?

Thanks
 

qawe

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neither of these. you use this: "the line joining the midpoints of two sides of a triangle is parallel to the 3rd side (and half its length)" - its on the syllabus
 

nightweaver066

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neither of these. you use this: "the line joining the midpoints of two sides of a triangle is parallel to the 3rd side (and half its length)" - its on the syllabus
It's not joining the midpoints but cutting the two equal sides of an isosceles triangle equally..
 

thoth1

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neither of these. you use this: "the line joining the midpoints of two sides of a triangle is parallel to the 3rd side (and half its length)" - its on the syllabus
i neva new bout this. tnx
 

Drongoski

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For 2U maths, yr approach not quite adequate. It is better to:

i) show similarity of 2 triangles by virtue of proportionality of pairs of sides & equality of included angles

ii) then use equality of a pair of corresponding angles to conclude 2 relevant lines are parallel
 
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taeyang

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For 2U maths, yr approach not quite adequate. It is better to:

i) show similarity of 2 triangles by virtue of proportionality of pairs of sides & equality of included angles

ii) then use equality of a pair of corresponding angles to conclude 2 relevant lines are parallel
^This
 

nightweaver066

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For 2U maths, yr approach not quite adequate. It is better to:

i) show similarity of 2 triangles by virtue of proportionality of pairs of sides & equality of included angles

ii) then use equality of a pair of corresponding angles to conclude 2 relevant lines are parallel
What do you mean for 2U maths?

Do you mean this is not a really suitable way to explain it this way in 2U math but possible in 3U and 4U math?
 

Drongoski

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In this case,(I shouldn't have qualfied it with the 2U), you are almost assuming the very proposition you are trying to prove.
 
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MrBrightside

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If your given the points, you can use gradient formula to find the gradient of both lines then it's just m1 = m2
 

hscishard

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I've seen an answer using the converse. Forgot which book it was from.
Drongoski's method is fail-safe and I would've done that for sure
 

Drongoski

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If your given the points, you can use gradient formula to find the gradient of both lines then it's just m1 = m2
In Euclidean geometry we don't use gradients. Even if we can, where are we told or how do we know m1 = m2?
 
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