Trig cheat sheet.1.Trig Cheat SheetDefinition of the Trig FunctionsRight triangle definitionFor this definition we assume thatp0.
To create a cheat sheet first, you must choose the formulas you need to include in it. It is possible to choose formulas of several pages. It is crucial to remember that many relevant formulas will be provided in the reference manual.
Formulas to Help You in TrigonometryMany of the formulas used in trigonometry are also found in algebra and analytic geometry. But trigonometry also has some special formulas usually found just in those discussions. A formula provides you a rule or equation that you can count on to work, every single time. A formula gives a relationship between particular quantities and units. The main trick to using formulas is to know what the different letters represent. In the formulas given here, you have: r (radius); d (diameter or distance); b (base or measure of a side); h (height); a, b, c (measures of sides); x, y (coordinates on a graph); m (slope); M (midpoint); h, k (horizontal and vertical distances from the center); θ (angle theta); and s (arc length). The formulas particular to trigonometry have: sin (sine), cos (cosine), and tan (tangent), although only sin is represented here.
Special Right TrianglesEvery right triangle has the property that the sum of the squares of the two legs is equal to the square of the hypotenuse (the longest side). The Pythagorean theorem is written: a 2 + b 2 = c 2. What’s so special about the two right triangles shown here is that you have an even more special relationship between the measures of the sides — one that goes beyond (but still works with) the Pythagorean theorem. When you have a 30-60-90 right triangle, the measure of the hypotenuse is always twice the measure of the shortest side, and the other leg is alwaysor about 1.7 times as big as the shortest side. With the isosceles right triangle, the two legs measure the same, and the hypotenuse is always.
Right Triangle Definitions for Trigonometry FunctionsThe basic trig functions can be defined with ratios created by dividing the lengths of the sides of a right triangle in a specific order. The label hypotenuse always remains the same — it’s the longest side. But the designations of opposite and adjacent can change — depending on which angle you’re referring to at the time. The opposite side is always that side that doesn’t help make up the angle, and the adjacent side is always one of the sides of the angle.
Coordinate Definitions for Trigonometry FunctionsThe trig functions can be defined using the measures of the sides of a right triangle. But they also have very useful definitions using the coordinates of points on a graph. First, let let the vertex of an angle be at the origin — the point (0,0) — and let the initial side of that angle lie along the positive x-axis and the terminal side be a rotation in a counterclockwise motion. Then, when the point ( x, y) lies on a circle that’s intersected by that terminal side, the trig functions are defined with the following ratios, where r is the radius of the circle.