 | Adrien Marie Legendre - Geometry - 1819 - 208 pages
...angles equal and their homologous sides proportional ; therefore they are similar (162). 264. Corollary. The perimeters of two regular polygons of the same number of sides are to each other as their homologous sides, and their surfaces are as the squares of these sides (221). 265. Scholium.... | |
 | Adrien Marie Legendre - Geometry - 1822 - 367 pages
...of the inscribed circle. PROPOSITION VIII. THEOREM. The perimeters of two regular polygons, Juming the same number of sides, are to each other as the radii of the circumscribed circles, and also as the radii of the inscribed circles ; their surfaces are to each other as the squares of those... | |
 | Adrien Marie Legendre - Geometry - 1825 - 280 pages
...angles equal and their homologous sides proportional ; therefore they are similar (162). 264. Corollary. The perimeters of two regular polygons of the same number of sides are to each other as their homologous sides, and their surfaces are as the squares of these sides (221). 265. Scholium.... | |
 | Adrien Marie Legendre, John Farrar - Geometry - 1825 - 280 pages
...angles equal and their homologous sides proportional ; therefore they are similar (162). 264. Corollary. The perimeters of two regular polygons of the same number of sides are to each other as their homologous sides, and their surfaces are as the squares of these sides (221). 265. Scholium.... | |
 | Adrien Marie Legendre - Geometry - 1828 - 346 pages
...angles equal, and their homologous sides proportional ; consequently (102.) they -are similar. 264. Cor. The perimeters of two regular polygons of the same number of sides, are to each other as their homologous sides, and their surfaces, as the squares of those sides (221.) 265. Scholium. The... | |
 | Timothy Walker - Geometry - 1829 - 158 pages
...that it is made up of infinitely small straight lines. 95. THEOREM. — The pe.rime.le.rs of regular polygons of the. same number of sides are to each other as the radii of their circumscribed circles. By th^orimeter of a polygon we mean the sum of its sides;^Snen we say... | |
 | James Hayward - Geometry - 1829 - 228 pages
...circumscribed circles; and ON, on, are radii of the inscribed circles. We therefore say—The areas of regular polygons of the same number of sides, are to each other as the squares of the radii of the circumscribed circles, and also of the inscribed circles. (on)* 0 (boc)... | |
 | James Hayward - Geometry - 1829 - 218 pages
...circles ; it follows (92) that — In regular polygons of the same number of sides, the perimeters are to each other as the radii of the circumscribed circles, and also as the radii of the inscribed circles. 140. Each angle of an equilateral triangle is an angle... | |
 | Francis Joseph Grund - Geometry, Plane - 1830 - 274 pages
...perimeter of that figure. The above proportion may therefore be expressed in shorter terms; namely, the perimeters of two regular polygons of the same number of sides, are to each other in the proportion of the radii of the inscribed or circumscribed circles. 2. The areas of two regular... | |
 | Francis Joseph Grund - Geometry, Plane - 1834 - 190 pages
...perimeter of that figure. The above proportion may therefore be expressed in shorter terms ; namely, the perimeters of two regular polygons of the same number of sides, are to each other in the proportion of the radii of the inscribed or circumscribed circles. 2. Tlie areas of two regular... | |
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