asked 64.7k views
0 votes
Geometry help? How would I solve this?

Geometry help? How would I solve this?-example-1

1 Answer

5 votes

\bf \textit{sum of interior angles in a regular polygon} \\\\\\ n\theta=180(n-2)\qquad \begin{cases} n=\textit{number of sides}\\ \theta=\textit{angle in degrees} \end{cases} \\\\\\ \textit{notice, your two polygons, are just two regular octagons}\\ \textit{OCTAgons, thus OCTA = 8, 8 sides, thus} \\\\\\ n\theta=180(n-2)\qquad n=8\implies 8\theta=180(8-2) \\\\\\ \theta=\cfrac{180\cdot 6}{8}

so... that's how much an internal angle is
now, subtract that from 180 and you get the angle outside, in the picture

subtract that outside angle twice from 180, and you get angle "2"
because angle 2 is in the same triangle as those two outside angles, and all internal angles in a triangle is 180, thus 180 - (those two angles) is angle "2"
Geometry help? How would I solve this?-example-1
answered
User Sabik
by
8.3k points

No related questions found

Welcome to Qamnty — a place to ask, share, and grow together. Join our community and get real answers from real people.