Problem 49933. Splitting Triangle - Problem the second
Consider an equilateral triangle sitting in Quadrant I as depicted in an example below:
This equilateral triangle is to be split into two regions (e.g., red and blue). Given the ratio between the two regions and the side of the equilateral triangle, determine the angle between the red line splitting the regions and the positive x-axis (in degrees). The ratio between the regions (red to blue) is presented through the first two entries in the input. For example, if the ratio is 11 to 12, then these two numbers will be the first two numbers in the input. The last entry is the side of the triangle.
Solution Stats
Problem Comments
Solution Comments
Show commentsGroup

CodeCrunch 1
- 11 Problems
- 10 Finishers
- Calculate the height of an object dropped from the sky
- Compute the missing quantity among P, V, T for an ideal gas
- Remove duplicated triangles
- An Ohm's Law Calculator
- Laws of motion 6
- Find the longest sequence of 1's in a binary sequence.
- Determine whether a vector is monotonically increasing
- Calculate the probability that at least two people in a group share the same birthday.
- Finding Perfect Squares
- The Goldbach Conjecture
- Pangrams!
Problem Recent Solvers32
Problem Tags
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!