Consider a triangle ABC like the one below. Suppose that A=105°, b=14, and c=42. (The figure is not drawn to scale.) Solve the triangle. Carry your intermediate computations to at least four decimal places, and round your answers to the nearest tenth. If there is more than one solution, use the button labeled "or".
Consider a triangle ABC like the one below. Suppose that A=105°, b=14, and c=42. (The figure is not drawn to scale.) Solve the triangle. Carry your intermediate computations to at least four decimal places, and round your answers to the nearest tenth. If there is more than one solution, use the button labeled "or".
Consider a triangle ABC like the one below. Suppose that A=105°, b=14, and c=42. (The figure is not drawn to scale.) Solve the triangle. Carry your intermediate computations to at least four decimal places, and round your answers to the nearest tenth. If there is more than one solution, use the button labeled "or".
Consider a triangle ABC like the one below. Suppose that A=105°, b=14, and c=42. (The figure is not drawn to scale.) Solve the triangle.
Carry your intermediate computations to at least four decimal places, and round your answers to the nearest tenth.
If there is more than one solution, use the button labeled "or".
Polygon with three sides, three angles, and three vertices. Based on the properties of each side, the types of triangles are scalene (triangle with three three different lengths and three different angles), isosceles (angle with two equal sides and two equal angles), and equilateral (three equal sides and three angles of 60°). The types of angles are acute (less than 90°); obtuse (greater than 90°); and right (90°).
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