Contributor: Ashley Nail. Lesson ID: 13245
How do you know how much cheese to use on a slice of pizza? Learn how to find the area of triangles and how it relates to rectangles and parallelograms. Quick...before you have a pizza emergency!
Have you ever wondered how many inches of cheese cover your slice of pizza? Or how much sauce?
You should already know that area measures the space covering a plane shape.
If you need to review the concepts of area or plane shapes, visit our lessons found under Additional Resources in the right-hand sidebar.
In order to understand how to find the area of a triangle, you need to know how to find the area of a rectangle.
To find the area of a rectangle, you multiply the base by the height:
Now, let's look at our first triangle. Notice that there is also a base and height measurement.
Look what happens if we copy our triangle, rotate it, and move it to the other side:
We made a rectangle!
We know the area of a rectangle is base multiplied by height (b ⋅ h). Our original triangle is half of this rectangle.
So in order to find the area of a triangle, we will multiply the base by the height and then divide that answer by 2. This is also half of the area of a rectangle.
It was a different-shaped triangle. It was not a right triangle.
Just like with the right triangle, let's copy the triangle, rotate it, and move it to the other side.
This time, our triangles did not make a rectangle! They made a parallelogram!
If not, visit our lesson found under Additional Resources in the right-hand sidebar.
The area of a parallelogram is also base multiplied by height (b ⋅ h)!
So, just like with the right triangle, the area of this triangle will be half of the area of a parallelogram.
The only difference is that the height measurement will not be the length of one of the triangle's sides. The height will always be at a right angle and will measure from the base to the highest point of the triangle.
For a quick recap and everything you just learned, watch Formula for Area of a Triangle - Why? from Amy Cotten:
Now, you are ready to find the area of our pizza slice!
Visit the Got It? section to show what you learned!