I am doing a geometry class and I ran into an issue trying to draw different size triangles based on the angles. I have not been able to draw them accurately. How is this done? Is this harder than it looks for others?
Thanks
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Drawing triangles at different sizes based on angles. How do I do this.
#2
Posted 23 February 2012 - 01:04 AM
methodman, on 22 February 2012 - 04:08 PM, said:
I am doing a geometry class and I ran into an issue trying to draw different size triangles based on the angles. I have not been able to draw them accurately. How is this done? Is this harder than it looks for others?
Thanks
Thanks
Here is a TRANSPARENT 90 degree Protractor, --- hope it helps.
Lee
#3
Posted 17 March 2012 - 10:06 PM
Thanks for your patience. I actually have been for the last 2 1/2 months working on 1 page of drawing triangles keeping the angles the same but I still am not getting it. I know cognitivly some issues are somewhere that is why I am not trying to follow other people's directions but trying my own intuition for a change. I'll get it I hope within two week or I will take formal instruction again. But I had to make a strong effort what I find interesting is at our local art exhibit Turtle Bay they have a Dr Seuss Exhibit and he drew many of his characters and backgrounds based on clouds. Which for me is interesting I have been in there when kids have taken tours and the teachers never mention shapes within shapes and I have showed security guards which I find it interesting that the adult community fails to notice things like this so often. Much of his artwork is very funny when you understand it. He understood all hats involved in writing clips and differences and then associating it into a larger problem and into other chapters. Based on illustrations.
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