rectangular

rectangular

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Rectangle



In Euclidean plane geometry, a rectangle is a rectilinear convex polygon or a quadrilateral with four right angles. It can also be defined as: an equiangular quadrilateral, since equiangular means that all of its angles are equal (360°/4 = 90°); or a parallelogram containing a right angle. A rectangle with four sides of equal length is a square. The term "oblong" is used to refer to a non-square rectangle.[1][2][3] A rectangle with vertices ABCD would be denoted as  ABCD.
The word rectangle comes from the Latin rectangulus, which is a combination of rectus (as an adjective, right, proper) and angulus (angle).
A crossed rectangle is a crossed (self-intersecting) quadrilateral which consists of two opposite sides of a rectangle along with the two diagonals[4] (therefore only two sides are parallel). It is a special case of an antiparallelogram, and its angles are not right angles and not all equal, though opposite angles are equal. Other geometries, such as spherical, elliptic, and hyperbolic, have so-called rectangles with opposite sides equal in length and equal angles that are not right angles.
Rectangles are involved in many tiling problems, such as tiling the plane by rectangles or tiling a rectangle by polygons.
A convex quadrilateral is a rectangle if and only if it is any one of the following:[5][6]
A rectangle is a special case of a parallelogram in which each pair of adjacent sides is perpendicular.
A parallelogram is a special case of a trapezium (known as a trapezoid in North America) in which both pairs of opposite sides are parallel and equal in length.
A trapezium is a convex quadrilateral which has at least one pair of parallel opposite sides.
A convex quadrilateral is
De Villiers defines a rectangle more generally as any quadrilateral with axes of symmetry through each pair of opposite sides.[9] This definition includes both right-angled rectangles and crossed rectangles. Each has an axis of symmetry parallel to and equidistant from a pair of opposite sides, and another which is the perpendicular bisector of those sides, but, in the case of the crossed rectangle, the first axis is not an axis of symmetry for either side that it bisects.
Quadrilaterals with two axes of symmetry, each through a pair of opposite sides, belong to the larger class of quadrilaterals with at least one axis of symmetry through a pair of opposite sides. These quadrilaterals comprise isosceles trapezia and crossed isosceles trapezia (crossed quadrilaterals with the same vertex arrangement as isosceles trapezia).
A rectangle is cyclic: all corners lie on a single circle.
It is equiangular: all its corner angles are equal (each of 90 degrees).
It is isogonal or vertex-transitive: all corners lie within the same symmetry orbit.
It has two lines of reflectional symmetry and rotational symmetry of order 2 (through 180°).
The dual polygon of a rectangle is a rhombus, as shown in the table below.[10]
A rectangle is a rectilinear polygon: its sides meet at right angles.
A rectangle in the plane can be defined by five independent degrees of freedom consisting, for example, of three for position (comprising two of translation and one of rotation), one for shape (aspect ratio), and one for overall size (area).
Two rectangles, neither of which will fit inside the other, are said to be incomparable.
If a rectangle has length and width , then:[11]
The isoperimetric theorem for rectangles states that among all rectangles of a given perimeter, the square has the largest area.
The midpoints of the sides of any quadrilateral with perpendicular diagonals form a rectangle.
A parallelogram with equal diagonals is a rectangle.
The Japanese theorem for cyclic quadrilaterals[12] states that the incentres of the four triangles determined by the vertices of a cyclic quadrilateral taken three at a time form a rectangle.
The British flag theorem states that with vertices denoted A, B, C, and D, for any point P on the same plane of a rectangle:[13]
For every convex body C in the plane, we can inscribe a rectangle r in C such that a homothetic copy R of r is circumscribed about C and the positive homothety ratio is at most 2 and .[14]
There exists a unique rectangle with sides and , where is less than , with two ways of being folded along a line through its center such that the area of overlap is minimized and each area yields a different shape – a triangle and a pentagon. The unique ratio of side lengths is .[15]
A crossed quadrilateral (self-intersecting) consists of two opposite sides of a non-self-intersecting quadrilateral along with the two diagonals. Similarly, a crossed rectangle is a crossed quadrilateral which consists of two opposite sides of a rectangle along with the two diagonals. It has the same vertex arrangement as the rectangle. It appears as two identical triangles with a common vertex, but the geometric intersection is not considered a vertex.
A crossed quadrilateral is sometimes likened to a bow tie or butterfly, sometimes called an "angular eight". A three-dimensional rectangular wire frame that is twisted can take the shape of a bow tie.
The interior of a crossed rectangle can have a polygon density of ±1 in each triangle, dependent upon the winding orientation as clockwise or counterclockwise.
A crossed rectangle may be considered equiangular if right and left turns are allowed. As with any crossed quadrilateral, the sum of its interior angles is 720°, allowing for internal angles to appear on the outside and exceed 180°.[16]
A rectangle and a crossed rectangle are quadrilaterals with the following properties in common:

In spherical geometry, a spherical rectangle is a figure whose four edges are great circle arcs which meet at equal angles greater than 90°. Opposite arcs are equal in length. The surface of a sphere in Euclidean solid geometry is a non-Euclidean surface in the sense of elliptic geometry. Spherical geometry is the simplest form of elliptic geometry.
In elliptic geometry, an elliptic rectangle is a figure in the elliptic plane whose four edges are elliptic arcs which meet at equal angles greater than 90°. Opposite arcs are equal in length.
In hyperbolic geometry, a hyperbolic rectangle is a figure in the hyperbolic plane whose four edges are hyperbolic arcs which meet at equal angles less than 90°. Opposite arcs are equal in length.
The rectangle is used in many periodic tessellation patterns, in brickwork, for example, these tilings:
A rectangle tiled by squares, rectangles, or triangles is said to be a "squared", "rectangled", or "triangulated" (or "triangled") rectangle respectively. The tiled rectangle is perfect[17][18] if the tiles are similar and finite in number and no two tiles are the same size. If two such tiles are the same size, the tiling is imperfect. In a perfect (or imperfect) triangled rectangle the triangles must be right triangles. A database of all known perfect rectangles, perfect squares and related shapes can be found at squaring.net. The lowest number of squares need for a perfect tiling of a rectangle is 9[19] and the lowest number needed for a perfect tilling a square is 21, found in 1978 by computer search.[20]
A rectangle has commensurable sides if and only if it is tileable by a finite number of unequal squares.[17][21] The same is true if the tiles are unequal isosceles right triangles.
The tilings of rectangles by other tiles which have attracted the most attention are those by congruent non-rectangular polyominoes, allowing all rotations and reflections. There are also tilings by congruent polyaboloes.
The following Unicode code points depict rectangles:

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  • ^ "Definition of Oblong". Math Is Fun. Retrieved 2011-11-13.
  • ^ Oblong – Geometry – Math Dictionary. Icoachmath.com. Retrieved 2011-11-13.
  • ^ Coxeter, Harold Scott MacDonald; Longuet-Higgins, M.S.; Miller, J.C.P. (1954). "Uniform polyhedra". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series A. Mathematical and Physical Sciences. 246 (916). The Royal Society: 401–450. Bibcode:1954RSPTA.246..401C. doi:10.1098/rsta.1954.0003. ISSN 0080-4614. JSTOR 91532. MR 0062446. S2CID 202575183.
  • ^ Zalman Usiskin and Jennifer Griffin, "The Classification of Quadrilaterals. A Study of Definition", Information Age Publishing, 2008, pp. 34–36 ISBN 1-59311-695-0.
  • ^ Owen Byer; Felix Lazebnik; Deirdre L. Smeltzer (19 August 2010). Methods for Euclidean Geometry. MAA. pp. 53–. ISBN 978-0-88385-763-2. Retrieved 2011-11-13.
  • ^ Gerard Venema, "Exploring Advanced Euclidean Geometry with GeoGebra", MAA, 2013, p. 56.
  • ^ a b Josefsson Martin (2013). "Five Proofs of an Area Characterization of Rectangles" (PDF). Forum Geometricorum. 13: 17–21. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2013-02-08.
  • ^ An Extended Classification of Quadrilaterals Archived 2019-12-30 at the Wayback Machine (An excerpt from De Villiers, M. 1996. Some Adventures in Euclidean Geometry. University of Durban-Westville.)
  • ^ de Villiers, Michael, "Generalizing Van Aubel Using Duality", Mathematics Magazine 73 (4), Oct. 2000, pp. 303–307.
  • ^ "Rectangle". Math Is Fun. Retrieved 2024-03-22.
  • ^ Cyclic Quadrilateral Incentre-Rectangle Archived 2011-09-28 at the Wayback Machine with interactive animation illustrating a rectangle that becomes a 'crossed rectangle', making a good case for regarding a 'crossed rectangle' as a type of rectangle.
  • ^ Hall, Leon M. & Robert P. Roe (1998). "An Unexpected Maximum in a Family of Rectangles" (PDF). Mathematics Magazine. 71 (4): 285–291. doi:10.1080/0025570X.1998.11996653. JSTOR 2690700. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-07-23. Retrieved 2011-11-13.
  • ^ Lassak, M. (1993). "Approximation of convex bodies by rectangles". Geometriae Dedicata. 47: 111–117. doi:10.1007/BF01263495. S2CID 119508642.
  • ^ Sloane, N. J. A. (ed.). "Sequence A366185 (Decimal expansion of the real root of the quintic equation )". The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences. OEIS Foundation.
  • ^ Stars: A Second Look. (PDF). Retrieved 2011-11-13.
  • ^ a b R.L. Brooks; C.A.B. Smith; A.H. Stone & W.T. Tutte (1940). "The dissection of rectangles into squares". Duke Math. J. 7 (1): 312–340. doi:10.1215/S0012-7094-40-00718-9.
  • ^ J.D. Skinner II; C.A.B. Smith & W.T. Tutte (November 2000). "On the Dissection of Rectangles into Right-Angled Isosceles Triangles". Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series B. 80 (2): 277–319. doi:10.1006/jctb.2000.1987.
  • ^ Sloane, N. J. A. (ed.). "Sequence A219766 (Number of nonsquare simple perfect squared rectangles of order n up to symmetry)". The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences. OEIS Foundation.
  • ^ "Squared Squares; Perfect Simples, Perfect Compounds and Imperfect Simples". www.squaring.net. Retrieved 2021-09-26.
  • ^ R. Sprague (1940). "Ũber die Zerlegung von Rechtecken in lauter verschiedene Quadrate". Journal für die reine und angewandte Mathematik (in German). 1940 (182): 60–64. doi:10.1515/crll.1940.182.60. S2CID 118088887.
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