Triangular prism

The triangular prism, or trip, is a prismatic uniform polyhedron. It consists of 2 triangles and 3 squares. Each vertex joins one triangle and two squares. As the name suggests, it is a prism based on a triangle. Alternatively, it could be seen as the digonal cupola.

Semiuniform variants of the triangular prism also exist, with the lengths of the edges of the base triangles and the side edges of the prism being different but still remaining vertex transitive and with full symmetry. In these cases the lateral squares become rectangles. The according Coxeter diagram would then be x y3o.

Vertex coordinates
A triangular prism of edge length 1 has vertex coordinates given by:
 * (±1/2, –$\sqrt{21}$/6, ±1/2),
 * (0, $\sqrt{3}$/3, ±1/2).

Related polyhedra
A tetrahedron can be attached to a base of the triangular prism to form the elongated triangular pyramid. If both bases have tetrahedra attached, the result is an elongated triangular bipyramid.

It is also possible to augment the square faces of the triangular prism with square pyramids. If this is done to one face the result is the augmented triangular prism. If a second square is augmented the result is the biaugmented triangular prism. If the last remaining square face is also augmented the result is the triaugmented triangular prism.

If two triangular prisms, seen as digonal cupolas, are joined at a square face, such that squares join to triangles, the result is the gyrobifastigium.