Square! Well, what I did (again, I dont know if this is the best method), was divide the square into four parts. Maybe that helps.I don't know how to find the area of the white curved bits next to the petals to subtract it from my rectangle
lol wut congruent trianglesOkay here is a nice question with a nice solution if anyone is able to come up with an elegant way of prove. I think it is suitable for Year 9-10 level.
This is in fact Euclid’s fifth proposition in the first book of his Elements (Base angles in an isosceles triangle are equal)
Elaborate.lol wut congruent triangles
draw a perpendicular lineElaborate.
AB = AC (given)Okay here is a nice question with a nice solution if anyone is able to come up with an elegant way of prove. I think it is suitable for Year 9-10 level.
This is in fact Euclid’s fifth proposition in the first book of his Elements (Base angles in an isosceles triangle are equal)
More info. I want an more elegant way, keep thinking.draw a perpendicular line
No. You can't do that. That's circular proving...AB = AC (given)
Angle ACB = Angle ABC (base angles of an isosceles triangle are equal).
Now back to enoilgams question.
No it doesn't make sense lol. Are you saying that the shaded area form a circle?@Fawun- small hint. There's more than one circle in the picture- there's the one that has its centre in the square in the middle and four quarter circles from the outside if that makes sense.
?No. You can't do that. That's circular proving...
Do you know why they are equal rather than stating the quote from the teacher/textbook?
More elegance needed.you're trying to prove that Fawun.. HAHA
Draw a perpendicular line from A to line BC. Then prove RHS, so corresponding angles in congruent triangles are equal.
i think he means colour in white parts in the middle of the square and u get a circle?No it doesn't make sense lol. Are you saying that the shaded area form a circle?
But WHY? I don't want you to simply quote from your teacher/textbook.?
They are equal because they're the base angles of an isosceles triangle.
Ohhhh shiet.you're trying to prove that Fawun.. HAHA
Draw a perpendicular line from A to line BC. Then prove RHS, so corresponding angles in congruent triangles are equal.
this can be circumscribed in a circle rite?More elegance needed.
Jesus Christ i got dis.But WHY? I don't want you to simply quote from your teacher/textbook.