| Benjamin Greenleaf - Geometry - 1862 - 518 pages
...Ans. 12 A. 20 P. PROBLEM IX. 622. To find the area of a TRIANGLE, the three sides being given. side ; multiply the half sum and the three remainders together,...square root of the product will be the area required. For, let ABC be a triangle whose three sides, AB, BC, AC, are given, but not the altitude CD, and let... | |
| Benjamin Greenleaf - Geometry - 1863 - 504 pages
...Ans. 12 A. 20 P. PROBLEM IX. 622. To find the area of a TRIANGLE, the three sides being given. side ; multiply the half sum and the three remainders together,...square root of the product will be the area required. For, let ABC be a triangle whose three sides, AB, BC, AC, are given, but not the altitude CD, and let... | |
| Oliver Byrne - Engineering - 1863 - 600 pages
...= area required. To find the area of a triangle whose three sides only are given. — From half the sum of the three sides subtract each side severally. Multiply the half sum and the three remainders continually together, and the square root of the product will be the area required Required the area... | |
| Benjamin Greenleaf - Geometry - 1863 - 502 pages
...Ans. 12 A. 20 P. PROBLEM IX. 622. To find the area of a TRIANGLE, the three sides being given. side ; multiply the half sum and the three remainders together, and the square root of the product ivill be the area required. For, let AB C be a triangle whose three C sides, AB, BC, AC, are given,... | |
| Harris & Brother (Philadelphia) - 1866 - 110 pages
...— Area from three sides given. From the half sum of the three sides subtract each side separately ; multiply the half sum and the three remainders together,...and the square root of the product will be the area. 4. TRAPEZOID — the sum of the two parallel sides X by half the perpendicular height. 5. CIRCLE =... | |
| A. C. Smeaton - Building - 1867 - 314 pages
...sides. RULE. Add the three sides together, and from half the sum subtract each side separately ; then multiply the half sum and the three remainders together,...square root of the product will be the area required. Let the sides of a triangle be 30, 40, and 50 feet, respectively, what will be the area ? 30 + 40 +... | |
| Gerardus Beekman Docharty - Geometry - 1867 - 474 pages
...derive the following RULES. from half the sum of the three sides ml/tract each side separately ; then multiply the half sum and the three remainders together, and the square root of their continued product will b« the area of the triangle. Or, RULE n. Add together the logarithms... | |
| Benjamin Greenleaf - Geometry - 1868 - 340 pages
...Ans. 12 A. 20 P. PROBLEM IX. 622. To find the area of a TRIANGLE, the three sides being given. side ; multiply the half sum and the three remainders together,...square root of the product will be the area required. For, let ABC be a triangle whose three sides, AB, BC, AC, are given, but not the altitude CD, and let... | |
| Anthony Nesbit - 1870 - 578 pages
...4. When the three sides of a triangle are given, the area may be found as fol. Iowa : From half the sum of the three sides subtract each side severally ; multiply the half sum and the three remainders continually together, and the square root of the last product will be the area required. This method... | |
| Alfred Hiley - 1871 - 184 pages
...when the three sides are given. Prom half the sum of the three sides, subtract each side separately. Multiply the half sum and the three remainders together, and the square root of the product is the area. THE TRIANGLE. Kg. 3. sion are given. — (a) Divide double the area by the base, and the... | |
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