Triangle

The triangle, or trig, is the simplest possible polygon, excluding the degenerate digon. Its highest symmetry version is called an equilateral triangle, to emphasize its three equal side lengths. It's the two dimensional simplex.

The combining prefix is tri-, as in triddip.

The equilateral triangle is one of the only three regular polygons that can tile the plane, the other two being the square and the hexagon. Its tiling is called the triangular tiling. It's also the regular simplex of highest dimension that can tile its respective (Euclidean) space.

This is one of two polygons without a stellation, the other being the square, and one of three without a non-compound stellation, the third being the hexagon.

It is one of two possible segmentogons, being a point atop a dyad. The other is the square.

Vertex coordinates
The vertices of a triangle of edge length 1 centered at the origin are:
 * (±1/2, –$\sqrt{3}$/6),
 * (0, $\sqrt{3}$/3).

Simpler coordinates can be given in three dimensions, as all permutations of:


 * (√2/2, 0, 0).

Representations
The triangle can be represented in three ways:


 * x3o (full symmetry)
 * ox&#x (axial, generally an isosceles triangle)
 * ooo&#x (no symmetry, generally a scalene triangle)

In vertex figures
The equilateral triangle is seen in the vertex figures of four uniform polyhedra, including three Platonic Solids and one Kepler–Poinsot solid.

Other kinds of triangles
Beside the equilateral triangle, there are other kinds of triangles with non-equal edge lengths. These are the isosceles triangle with only two equal edge lengths, and the scalene triangle, with no equal edge lengths. Notably, these retain many of the properties of the highest-symmetry variant: any triangle is convex, has an inscribed and an exscribed circle, and tiles the plane. The first two properties don't generalize to any other polygon, and the third generalizes only to the quadrilateral.