| Benjamin Martin - 1736 - 414 pągines
...Sides, Is to the Sine of their Difference, ( So is the Sine of the Sum of the Angles, to the Sine of their Difference ; ) So is the Tangent of half the Sum of the Angles, To the Tangent of halt their Différence. 14. That is, IK : IH: : AP :AO. Therefore IK+IH m IK-IH .... | |
| 1801 - 658 pągines
...and the angle included by them ; to find the rest. In a plane triangle, As the sum of any two sides : Is to their difference : : So is the tangent of half the sum of their opposite angles : • To the tangent of half their difference.* Then * DEMONSTRATION. By the... | |
| Abel Flint - 1804 - 226 pągines
...this CASE depends on the following PROPOSITION. In every Plane Triangle, As the Sum of any two Sides ; Is to their Difference ; So is the Tangent of half the Sum of the two opposite Angles ; To the Tangent of half the Difference between them. Add this half difference... | |
| Robert Gibson - 1806 - 486 pągines
...wholes are as their halves, ie AH : IH : : CE : ED, that is .as the sum of the two sides AB and BC, is to their difference ; so is the tangent of half the sum of the two unknown angles A and C, to the tangent of half their difference. QED 104 PLANE TRIGONOMETRY. Plate... | |
| John Bonnycastle - 1806 - 464 pągines
...included angle are given, to find the rest. SR.ULE. As the sum of any two sides of a plane triangle, is to their difference, so is the tangent of half the sum of their opposite angles, to the tangent of half their difference. Then the half difference of these angles,... | |
| Robert Simson - 1806 - 546 pągines
...Let ABC be a plane triangle, live sura of any two sides, AB, AC will be to their difiV.-rt.-nce as the tangent of half the sum of the angles at the base ABC, ACB to the tangent of half their difference. About A as a centre, with AB the greater side for... | |
| Isaac Dalby - 1807 - 476 pągines
...triangles DRA, DGB will be similar; whence we have, DG : DR :: GB : RA; That is, as the sum of the sides, is to their difference, so is the tangent of half the sum of the unknown or opposite angles, to the tangent of half the difference of those angles. Examp. 1. Let CD... | |
| Robert Gibson - 1808 - 482 pągines
...wholes areas their halves, ie AH : IH : : CE : ED, that is, as the sum of the two sides AB and BC, is to their difference ; so is the tangent of half the sum of the two unknown angles A and C, to the tangent of half their difference. QED Plate V. THEO. III. In any... | |
| Abel Flint - 1808 - 190 pągines
...this CASE depends on the following PROPOSITION. In every Plane Triangle, As the Sum of any two Sides ; Is to their Difference ; So is the Tangent of half the Sum of the two opposite Angles ; To the Tangent of half the Difference between them. Add this half difference... | |
| Sir John Leslie - 1809 - 522 pągines
...consequently AB: BC:: S,C: S,A. PROP.X. THEOR. In any triangle, the sum of two sides, is to the difference, as the tangent of half the sum of the angles at the base, to the tangent of half their difference. In the triangle ABC, AB + AC : AB— AC : : T, : f ., ( ,— [ t 2 -For, by the last proposition, AB... | |
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