Pythagorean Theorem Explained
Pennpaper Team
The Pythagorean theorem is one of the most useful geometry formulas because it connects the three sides of a right triangle.
Quick idea
In a right triangle, the squares of the two legs add up to the square of the hypotenuse.
Steps
- Identify the right angle.
- Find the hypotenuse, which is opposite the right angle.
- Substitute the known side lengths into the formula.
- Solve for the missing side and simplify.
Worked example
Find the hypotenuse when the legs are 3 and 4.
Full solution
Step-by-step walkthrough
Step 1
Square the legs: 3 squared is 9 and 4 squared is 16.
Step 2
Add them to get 25.
Step 3
The square root of 25 is 5.
Common mistake
Only use this theorem with right triangles. It does not work for every triangle.
Practice problems
- Find c when a = 6 and b = 8.
- Find a when c = 13 and b = 5.
- Find c when a = 5 and b = 12.
Answers
- 10
- 12
- 13
Ask Pennpaper to explain it live
If the steps make sense but you still feel stuck, start a Pennpaper lesson and ask the tutor to draw the problem on the whiteboard. Seeing the symbols move step by step is often what makes the concept click.