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davee123
Feb11-09, 12:09 AM
So, being inundated with the "How many triangles?" questions on Facebook, I noticed this one which is actually more difficult than I expect the question author intended:
http://creative.ak.facebook.com/ads3/flyers/36/28/6002237517496_1_992e4bd8.jpg
Assuming you have 21 dots evenly distributed in an equilateral triangular pattern (like bowling pins), how many distinct triangles can be formed by connecting the dots?

Of course, I'll bet they expect people to interpret "equilateral triangles" rather than simply "triangles", but it does make for a more interesting challenge.

And on that note, how many are possible with 3 dots, 6 dots, 10 dots, and 15 dots? Is there a nice formula for progression as the number of available dots increases?

DaveE

Rogerio
Feb11-09, 10:12 AM
When the "starting triangle's base" has N dots, then the number of equilateral triangles is
(N-1)*N*(N+1)*(N+2)/24 which means 70 equilateral triangles in the figure.

:smile:

Gokul43201
Feb11-09, 10:32 AM
Of course, I'll bet they expect people to interpret "equilateral triangles" rather than simply "triangles", but it does make for a more interesting challenge.Which way do you want us to interpret it: only equilaterals or all triangles?

davee123
Feb11-09, 11:21 AM
I suppose both questions are interesting-- answer what you will, I guess! But I couldn't think of a formula that expressed the number of "triangles" given N dots. I honestly never even tried to answer the equilateral triangle question, since it seemed more trivial. But there are some interesting caveats to it.

DaveE

Gokul43201
Feb11-09, 11:50 AM
I get a different answer from rogerio for equilateral triangles. Maybe I am overlooking some triangles somewhere...

For N even:
n(2n^2-n-2)/8 = 48 triangles for n=6 base dots
For N odd:
(n-1)(n+1)(2n-1)/8 triangles.

davee123
Feb11-09, 12:09 PM
I get a different answer from rogerio for equilateral triangles. Maybe I am overlooking some triangles somewhere...

I got the same answer as Rogerio for the equilateral triangles-- there are some non-standard orientations, don't forget!

DaveE

Gokul43201
Feb11-09, 12:29 PM
I got the same answer as Rogerio for the equilateral triangles-- there are some non-standard orientations, don't forget!

DaveEOops, yes! I was missing those.

DaveC426913
Feb11-09, 01:08 PM
I'm assuming your formulae simply count all possible 3-dot combinations and assumes a triangle joins them. Is that correct?

Do these formula eliminate "degenerate shapes"? i.e. three dots in a straight line does not a triangle make, so some combos of 3 dots are not valid.

Oh, I see you guys are pursing only equilateral triangles so far, so my point is moot.

davee123
Feb11-09, 01:21 PM
I see you guys are pursing only equilateral triangles so far, so my point is moot.

Well, moot in terms of equilateral triangles, but not all triangles, which is what I was more interested in. Figuring out all the sets of 3 points is pretty simple, but figuring out which sets of 3 are in straight lines was tougher-- at least in terms of trying to get a formula.

DaveE

DaveC426913
Feb11-09, 01:55 PM
Well, moot in terms of equilateral triangles, but not all triangles, which is what I was more interested in. Figuring out all the sets of 3 points is pretty simple, but figuring out which sets of 3 are in straight lines was tougher-- at least in terms of trying to get a formula.

DaveE
I suppose it would be easier to write an algorithm (where you have access to loops and decision trees) than a formula. I wonder if all algorithms are transposable into formulae...

Rogerio
Feb11-09, 04:18 PM
Figuring out all the sets of 3 points is pretty simple, but figuring out which sets of 3 are in straight lines was tougher-- at least in terms of trying to get a formula.

Agreed.

I got 114 degenerated triangles (3 points in line).
So the number of general triangles in the figure is
21*20*19/6 - 114 = 1216.

But it was a very ugly way...

davee123
Feb11-09, 04:51 PM
Yep, that matches what I got, although I just did 21 choose 3 - 114. Same difference, though.

DaveE

Gokul43201
Feb11-09, 06:31 PM
General formula for the 114? Now that should be fun!