Asif,
I must be misunderstanding this problem. It seems to be that a triangle with x = 20 and y = 30 could not have an area greater than x*y/2 = 300. Yet, problem 1 says the area is 600. How could it be so large? My calculations says that with this x and y, there is no solution for r = 10.
hello william,
in the triangle ABC, the radius of the circle intersects AB in the point 'c' (small letter c in the figure).
There, Ac=x and Bc=y.
I see. Then you need to change the statement of the problem to say "Ac = x" and "Bc = y", rather than "AC = x" and "BC = y". Since "C" and "c" are different points on the diagram, this changes the problem completely. As written, the problem is quite difficult to solve.
yes .. i didn't see that before
The Goldbach Conjecture, Part 2
1331 Solvers
342 Solvers
404 Solvers
MATCH THE STRINGS (2 CHAR) very easy
252 Solvers
Side of an equilateral triangle
2888 Solvers
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!