How Do I Choose Between Sin, Cos, and Tan in Trigonometry Problems?

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Understanding when to use sine, cosine, or tangent in trigonometry relies on identifying the angle in question and the sides of the triangle involved. The mnemonic SohCahToa helps determine the appropriate function based on whether the side in question is opposite, adjacent, or the hypotenuse. Drawing the triangle can clarify which sides correspond to the angle being measured, making it easier to apply the correct ratio. For right-angled triangles, if the hypotenuse is known and one side is sought, use cosine for adjacent sides and sine for opposite sides. Mastering these concepts will enhance problem-solving in physics and trigonometry.
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No problem specifically, just more of a method question.
I am extremely confused on when to use sin cos and tan. Say for instance it gives me an angle, say theta, and one side. How would I be able to tell what to use sin cos or tan. I know the trick SohCahToa but I really am confused. I am in a physics class and this comes up all the time and I feel as if I eliminate this barrier it will really benefit me in the long run. Thanks.
 
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First understand what angle they are talking about. If you know what angle is being measured, then using sohcahtoa you can decide for yourself if sin cos or tan need to be used. If youre confused, draw the problem out to make it easier for you to see which angle is in question.
 
Hi jamesdubya! :smile:

Since you know SohCahToa, I don't really understand what the problem is.

If you're given a right-angled triangle, and the length of the hypotenuse, and they ask you the length of one side, then see if that side is the adjacent side … if it is, you want adjacent/hypotenuse, so that's cos (Cah :wink:), if it's not, you want opposite/hypotenuse, so that's sin (Soh).

If you find SohCahToa difficult to apply, I suggest you remember that sin0 =tan0 = 0 and cos0 = 1 …

if you draw a thin triangle, so one angle is nearly 0, it's pretty obvious then which ratios are nearly 0 (so they must be sin and tan), and which is nearly 1 (so that must be cos). :smile:
 
Thank you very much that helps greatly :)
 
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