Overview

Geometry basics are about recognizing standard angle and length facts quickly. Draw clear diagrams, mark equal lengths, and use symmetry.

The fastest solutions usually come from one or two core facts applied cleanly.

Key Ideas

  • Triangle angle sum is 180180^\circ, and exterior angles equal the sum of two remote interior angles.
  • Similar triangles provide proportional sides and equal angles.
  • Areas can be computed via base-height or by decomposing into simpler shapes.
  • Circles add powerful angle facts, especially inscribed angles.

Core Facts

Triangle Basics

  • Sum of angles: A+B+C=180\angle A + \angle B + \angle C = 180^\circ.
  • Exterior angle equals sum of two remote interior angles.
  • Isosceles triangles have equal base angles.

Similarity

If two triangles are similar, corresponding sides are in a constant ratio kk. Areas scale by k2k^2.

Area

  • Base-height: A=12bhA=\frac{1}{2}bh.
  • Heron: A=s(sa)(sb)(sc)A=\sqrt{s(s-a)(s-b)(s-c)}.
  • Trig area: A=12absinCA=\frac{1}{2}ab\sin C.

Circle Angles

  • Inscribed angle is half the central angle on the same arc.
  • Angle in a semicircle is 9090^\circ.

Worked Example

In a right triangle with legs 66 and 88, find the radius of the incircle.

The hypotenuse is 1010, so the area is 1268=24\frac{1}{2}\cdot 6\cdot 8=24. The semiperimeter is 6+8+102=12\frac{6+8+10}{2}=12. The inradius is r=areas=2412=2r = \frac{\text{area}}{s} = \frac{24}{12}=2.

More Examples

Example 1: Similarity Scale

Two similar triangles have side ratio 2:32:3. If the smaller area is 88, the larger area is 8(3/2)2=188\cdot (3/2)^2 = 18.

Example 2: Angle Chase

If a triangle has angles xx, 2x2x, and 3x3x, then 6x=1806x=180^\circ so x=30x=30^\circ.

Example 3: Circle Angle

An inscribed angle subtends a 100100^\circ arc. Its measure is 5050^\circ.

Strategy Checklist

  • Mark equal lengths and right angles.
  • Look for similar triangles early.
  • Use area ratios when length ratios are known.
  • In circle problems, check for inscribed or central angle relations.

Common Pitfalls

  • Forgetting to label right angles or congruent segments.
  • Mixing up circumradius and inradius formulas.
  • Assuming similarity without proving it.

Practice Problems

StatusSourceProblem NameDifficultyTags
AMC 8Easy
Show TagsArc Length, Geometry Basics, Path Comparison
AMC 8Medium
Show TagsAngles, Circles, Geometry Basics
AMC 10Medium
Show TagsDistance, Geometry Basics, Rate Problems
AMC 8Medium
Show TagsArea, Geometry Basics, Rectangles, Triangles

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