Geometrija
Copyright 2010‐2015, Earl Whitney, Reno NV. All Rights Reserved
Math Handbook
of Formulas, Processes and Tricks
Geometry
Prepared by: Earl L. Whitney, FSA, MAAA
Version 2.9
November 26, 2015
Page
Description
Chapter
1:
Basics
6
Points,
Lines
&
Planes
7
Segments,
Rays
&
Lines
8
Distance
Between
Points
(1
‐
Dimensional,
2
‐
Dimensional)
9
Distance
Formula
in
“n”
Dimensions
10
Angles
11
Types
of
Angles
Chapter
2:
Proofs
12
Conditional
Statements
(Original,
Converse,
Inverse,
Contrapositive)
13
Basic
Properties
of
Algebra
(Equality
and
Congruence,
Addition
and
Multiplication)
14
Inductive
vs.
Deductive
Reasoning
15
An
Approach
to
Proofs
Chapter
3:
Parallel
and
Perpendicular
Lines
16
Parallel
Lines
and
Transversals
17
Multiple
Sets
of
Parallel
Lines
18
Proving
Lines
are
Parallel
19
Parallel
and
Perpendicular
Lines
in
the
Coordinate
Plane
Chapter
4:
Triangles
‐
Basic
20
Types
of
Triangles
(Scalene,
Isosceles,
Equilateral,
Right)
21
Congruent
Triangles
(SAS,
SSS,
ASA,
AAS,
CPCTC)
22
Centers
of
Triangles
23
Length
of
Height,
Median
and
Angle
Bisector
24
Inequalities
in
Triangles
Chapter
5:
Polygons
25
Polygons
–
Basic
(Definitions,
Names
of
Common
Polygons)
26
Polygons
–
More
Definitions
(Definitions,
Diagonals
of
a
Polygon)
27
Interior
and
Exterior
Angles
of
a
Polygon
Geometry
Handbook
Table
of
Contents
Version 2.9
Page 2 of 82
November 26, 2015

Geometry
Handbook
Table
of
Contents
Page
Description
Chapter
10:
Circles
58
Parts
of
a
Circle
59
Angles
and
Circles
Chapter
11:
Perimeter
and
Area
60
Perimeter
and
Area
of
a
Triangle
61
More
on
the
Area
of
a
Triangle
62
Perimeter
and
Area
of
Quadrilaterals
63
Perimeter
and
Area
of
General
Polygons
64
Circle
Lengths
and
Areas
65
Area
of
Composite
Figures
Chapter
12:
Surface
Area
and
Volume
66
Polyhedra
67
A
Hole
in
Euler’s
Theorem
68
Platonic
Solids
69
Prisms
70
Cylinders
71
Surface
Area
by
Decomposition
72
Pyramids
73
Cones
74
Spheres
75
Similar
Solids
76
Summary
of
Perimeter
and
Area
Formulas
–
2D
Shapes
77
Summary
of
Surface
Area
and
Volume
Formulas
–
3D
Shapes
78
Index
Version 2.9
Page 4 of 82
November 26, 2015
Geometry
Handbook
Table
of
Contents
Useful
Websites
mathworld.wolfram.com/
www.mathguy.us
www.cde.ca.gov/ta/tg/sr/documents/rtqgeom.pdf
Schaum’s
Outlines
An
important
student
resource
for
any
high
school
math
student
is
a
Schaum’s
Outline.
Each
book
in
this
series
provides
explanations
of
the
various
topics
in
the
course
and
a
substantial
number
of
problems
for
the
student
to
try.
Many
of
the
problems
are
worked
out
in
the
book,
so
the
student
can
see
examples
of
how
they
should
be
solved.
Schaum’s
Outlines
are
available
at
Amazon.com,
Barnes
&
Noble
and
other
booksellers.
Wolfram
Math
World
–
Perhaps
the
premier
site
for
mathematics
on
the
Web.
This
site
contains
definitions,
explanations
and
examples
for
elementary
and
advanced
math
topics.
Mathguy.us
–
Developed
specifically
for
math
students
from
Middle
School
to
College,
based
on
the
author's
extensive
experience
in
professional
mathematics
in
a
business
setting
and
in
math
tutoring.
Contains
free
downloadable
handbooks,
PC
Apps,
sample
tests,
and
more.
California
Standard
Geometry
Test
–
A
standardized
Geometry
test
released
by
the
state
of
California.
A
good
way
to
test
your
knowledge.
Version 2.9
Page 5 of 82
November 26, 2015

Chapter
1
Basic
Geometry
Geometry
Segments,
Rays
&
Lines
Some
Thoughts
About
…
Line
Segments
Line
segments
are
generally
named
by
their
endpoints,
so
the
segment
at
right
could
be
named
either
or
.
Segment
contains
the
two
endpoints
(
A
and
B
)
and
all
points
on
line
that
are
between
them.
Rays
Rays
are
generally
named
by
their
single
endpoint,
called
an
initial
point
,
and
another
point
on
the
ray.
Ray
contains
its
initial
point
A
and
all
points
on
line
in
the
direction
of
the
arrow.
Rays
and
are
not
the
same
ray.
If
point
O
is
on
line
and
is
between
points
A
and
B
,
then
rays
and
are
called
opposite
rays
.
They
have
only
point
O
in
common,
and
together
they
make
up
line
.
Lines
Lines
are
generally
named
by
either
a
single
script
letter
(e.g.,
l
)
or
by
two
points
on
the
line
(e.g.,.
).
A
line
extends
infinitely
in
the
directions
shown
by
its
arrows.
Lines
are
parallel
if
they
are
in
the
same
plane
and
they
never
intersect.
Lines
f
and
g
,
at
right,
are
parallel.
Lines
are
perpendicular
if
they
intersect
at
a
90
⁰
angle.
A
pair
of
perpendicular
lines
is
always
in
the
same
plane.
Lines
f
and
e
,
at
right,
are
perpendicular.
Lines
g
and
e
are
also
perpendicular.
Lines
are
skew
if
they
are
not
in
the
same
plane
and
they
never
intersect.
Lines
k
and
l
,
at
right,
are
skew.
(Remember
this
figure
is
3
‐
dimensional.)
Version 2.9
Page 7 of 82
November 26, 2015
Ovaj materijal je namenjen za učenje i pripremu, ne za predaju.
Slični dokumenti