Example 1: Calculate
Step 4: Calculate each unknown
Hypotenuse:
Adjacent leg:
Other angle:
Example 1: Check Your Work
Step 5: Check
Do the angles add to 180°?
Does Pythagorean hold?
Example 2: Another Setup
Given: hypotenuse = 10, angle = 35°
Solution:
- Other angle:
- Opposite leg:
→ - Adjacent leg:
→
Check-In
Did we find ALL unknowns?
What if we stopped after finding the two legs?
What would still be missing?
Transition: Combining Tools
Now let's combine trig and Pythagorean strategically
Pattern 1: Angle + One Side
When you know an angle and one side:
- Use trig to find the other two sides directly
- Pythagorean is a check, not the main tool
Pattern 1 Example: Hypotenuse and Angle
Given: hypotenuse = 15, angle = 60°
Find both legs:
- Opposite:
→ - Adjacent:
→
Pattern 1: Alternative Check
Check with Pythagorean:
Small rounding difference - both methods work!
Check-In
Which trig ratio connects opposite and hypotenuse?
Think about SOH-CAH-TOA...
Pattern 2: Two Sides Only
When you know two sides but no angles:
- Use Pythagorean to find the third side
- Use inverse trig to find the angles
Pattern 2 Example: Two Legs
Given: legs 6 and 8
Step 1: Find hypotenuse with Pythagorean
Pattern 2 Example: Find Angles
Step 2: Find angles with inverse trig
Now we have all five unknowns!
Check-In
Can Pythagorean Theorem find an angle?
Why not?
Tool Selection Table
Quick reference for choosing tools
Your Turn: Practice
Given: leg = 5, hypotenuse = 12
Your task:
- Identify which pattern this fits
- Find the other leg
- Find both acute angles
Try each step before checking your answer
Summary: Foundation Complete
✓ Solve = find all sides and angles
✓ 5-step process: identify, list, choose, calculate, check
✓ Pattern 1: angle + side → trig first
✓ Pattern 2: two sides → Pythagorean, then inverse trig
Next: Part 2 applies these tools to real-world problems