WAEC WAEC Nigeria General Mathematics

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(Length and Perimeters)

Pythagoras Theorem

Pythagoras' Theorem

Pythagoras who?

  • Pythagoras was an ancient Greek mathematician who lived over 2500 years ago. 
  • He is best known for discovering the Pythagorean Theorem, which is one of the fundamental principles in geometry, used for finding missing side lengths in right-angled triangles.

 
Pythagoras' Theorem Explained

Pythagoras' Theorem states that in any right-angled triangle

  • The square of the hypotenuse (longest side) is equal to the sum of the squares of the other two sides:

a2+b2=c2a^2 + b^2 = c^2

 

Pythagoras' theorem diagram with equation

 

where:

  • c is the hypotenuse (the side opposite the right angle and the longest side)
  • a and b are the two shorter sides

Key Note: It does not matter which of the two shorter sides is labeled as a or b, but c must always be the hypotenuse

 

Finding the Hypotenuse

If you need to find the hypotenuse (c):

  1. Square the lengths of both shorter sides.
  2. Add these squared values.
  3. Take the square root to find c.

c=a2+b2c = \sqrt{a^2 + b^2}

 

Example: Finding the Hypotenuse

A right-angled triangle has sides of 6 cm and 8 cm. Find the hypotenuse.

Final Answer: The hypotenuse is 10 cm.

 

Finding a Shorter Side

If you need to find one of the shorter sides:

  1. Square the lengths of the hypotenuse and the known shorter side.
  2. Subtract these squared values.
  3. Take the square root to find the missing side.

a=c2b2a = \sqrt{c^2 - b^2}

 

Example: Finding a Shorter Side

A right-angled triangle has a hypotenuse of 13 cm and one shorter side of 5 cm. Find the missing side.

a=13252 a=16925  a=144 a=12a = \sqrt{13^2 - 5^2} \quad  a = \sqrt{169 - 25}  \\  a = \sqrt{144} \quad  a = 12

Final Answer: The missing side is 12 cm.

 

 

Tuity Tip

Hover me!

Always check which side is the hypotenuse. It must be the longest side and is always opposite the right angle.

Double-check subtraction. When finding a shorter side, subtract correctly to avoid negative numbers (which result in errors when taking square roots).

Leave answers in exact form if required. If a question asks for an exact value, leave your answer as a square root (e.g., 50\sqrt{50} ) instead of a decimal approximation.

Round only at the final step. If the answer needs to be rounded to a certain number of decimal places, only round at the very end to avoid inaccuracies.

Worked Example

Problem: In the diagram below:

 

diagram of two triangles

AB=14cmAB = 14 \text{cm}

AC=24cmAC = 24 \text{cm}

AD=10cmAD = 10 \text{cm}

Find BCBC to 1 decimal place.

 

 

 

 

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