Editing Talk:2509: Useful Geometry Formulas

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If you don't assume that the bottom right figure is 3D, what's the justification for projecting upward and assuming that the angle theta is also the angle of the top parallelogram? [[User:Arl guy|Arl guy]] ([[User talk:Arl guy|talk]]) 02:25, 2 September 2021 (UTC)
 
If you don't assume that the bottom right figure is 3D, what's the justification for projecting upward and assuming that the angle theta is also the angle of the top parallelogram? [[User:Arl guy|Arl guy]] ([[User talk:Arl guy|talk]]) 02:25, 2 September 2021 (UTC)
 
:If you assume that the two rectangles have equal width and height, then it can be mathematically proven that the angles must be equal (probably using congruent triangles). However this assumption is not stated on the figure. That said, you would make the same assumption for the 3D figure, along with a whole bunch of other assumptions of course.[[Special:Contributions/172.70.147.23|172.70.147.23]] 06:31, 2 September 2021 (UTC) Edit: The two rectangles must have equal width and height to make the rest of the shapes parallelograms in the first place. If they aren't identical you get trapezoids all round and possibly a bunch of different angles. [[Special:Contributions/172.70.143.22|172.70.143.22]] 06:43, 2 September 2021 (UTC)
 
:If you assume that the two rectangles have equal width and height, then it can be mathematically proven that the angles must be equal (probably using congruent triangles). However this assumption is not stated on the figure. That said, you would make the same assumption for the 3D figure, along with a whole bunch of other assumptions of course.[[Special:Contributions/172.70.147.23|172.70.147.23]] 06:31, 2 September 2021 (UTC) Edit: The two rectangles must have equal width and height to make the rest of the shapes parallelograms in the first place. If they aren't identical you get trapezoids all round and possibly a bunch of different angles. [[Special:Contributions/172.70.143.22|172.70.143.22]] 06:43, 2 September 2021 (UTC)
:Yes, I think you are mostly right, but you don't necessarily get trapezoids all around. You can move the top solid line down and to the right and rotate the top left and top right slanted lines to keep the top shape a parallelogram, but the right shape will now be a trapezoid. I think the key assumption is that all the solid and dashed lines that loop parallel are, in fact, parallel. [[User:Arl guy|Arl guy]] ([[User talk:Arl guy|talk]]) 14:20, 2 September 2021 (UTC)
 
 
:There's always many possible {{w|Ames room|unindicated perspective tricks}} (or axonometric/othographic ones, as might be more appropriate) in which the components of lines and relationships towards/away from the viewer are non-zero (or {{w|Penrose triangle|not non-zero in the way expected}}). Various of the shapes involved could be infinitely warped with leans, curves or even highly inflected wiggles to allow ''some'' 'as expected' profile even as others that should be connected are not. (Though it would make the surface 'planes' warped and distorted, even more against the conventions of wireframe diagrams.)
 
:There's always many possible {{w|Ames room|unindicated perspective tricks}} (or axonometric/othographic ones, as might be more appropriate) in which the components of lines and relationships towards/away from the viewer are non-zero (or {{w|Penrose triangle|not non-zero in the way expected}}). Various of the shapes involved could be infinitely warped with leans, curves or even highly inflected wiggles to allow ''some'' 'as expected' profile even as others that should be connected are not. (Though it would make the surface 'planes' warped and distorted, even more against the conventions of wireframe diagrams.)
 
:Because of dependencies, as the theta moves the other similar angles ''might'' be thetas too, or they could be kept as RAs and (?)three ''other'' chosen angles could be distorted (in or out of the page, by a calculable and entirely derivative amount) to compensate. Or, like the Triangle illusion, there's overlaid duplicate edges with not all/any vertices actually being the same, just in the same illustrated place. (Again, making a mockery of the 'simple' diagram, but we're already way past that. ;) ) [[Special:Contributions/162.158.155.247|162.158.155.247]] 08:56, 2 September 2021 (UTC)
 
:Because of dependencies, as the theta moves the other similar angles ''might'' be thetas too, or they could be kept as RAs and (?)three ''other'' chosen angles could be distorted (in or out of the page, by a calculable and entirely derivative amount) to compensate. Or, like the Triangle illusion, there's overlaid duplicate edges with not all/any vertices actually being the same, just in the same illustrated place. (Again, making a mockery of the 'simple' diagram, but we're already way past that. ;) ) [[Special:Contributions/162.158.155.247|162.158.155.247]] 08:56, 2 September 2021 (UTC)

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