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I might be just extremely clueless right now, but this problem just
seriously doesn't seem to make sense. Here it is:
4. The endpoints of the diagonal of a square are located at (2,4)
and (6,2). Find the area of the square.
A.4
B.20
C.10
D.36
E.rad 40
In the back they use the formula side(squared) + side(squared) = diagonal(squared) and find the diagonal through the distance formula.
However, a diagonal with endpoints at (2,4) and (6,2) can't form a
square right? One side would have length 4 and the other length 2.
I'm probably massively missing something stupid here but I just can't
figure it out
seriously doesn't seem to make sense. Here it is:
4. The endpoints of the diagonal of a square are located at (2,4)
and (6,2). Find the area of the square.
A.4
B.20
C.10
D.36
E.rad 40
In the back they use the formula side(squared) + side(squared) = diagonal(squared) and find the diagonal through the distance formula.
However, a diagonal with endpoints at (2,4) and (6,2) can't form a
square right? One side would have length 4 and the other length 2.
I'm probably massively missing something stupid here but I just can't
figure it out
