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first of all, sorry for the lame question.

Having a starting point, A and a height (catet) of y, what's the formula to calculate x? Triangle

Thank you, i don't have any trig basis.

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    An equilateral triangle can be cut into two 30-60-90 triangles. If $y$ is the altitude, then $x=\frac{y}{\sqrt 3}$. You can use the Pythagorean theorem for this: $y^2+x^2=4x^2$.2012-01-06
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    You don't have enough information here. You need either one angle or the base length.2012-01-06
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    @ja72,the triangle is equilateral.2012-01-06
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    ja72, it's an equilateral triangle so all the angles are 60 deg. J.M. would you like to put that as an answer? so i can accept it? and thanks2012-01-06

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Since it's an equilateral triangle, each angle has measure 60°. If you consider one of the smaller, right triangles formed by the altitude, the legs have length $y$ (the altitude) and $x$ (along the base) and the angle opposite the $y$ leg has measure 60°, so $$\tan 60°=\frac{y}{x}.$$ Since $\tan 60°=\sqrt{3}$, $$x=\frac{y}{\sqrt{3}}.$$

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    One thing I find problematic about this is that it assumes $\tan 60^\circ=\sqrt{3}$ rather than taking the opportunity to show how that fact is derived from the Pythagorean theorem.2012-01-06
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    @MichaelHardy: I was going off having "trigonometry" in the title; having your solution as well is certainly worthwhile (and +1 there).2012-01-06
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Use the Pythagorean theorem. The length of each side of the triangle is $2x$, so you have a right triangle (either the left half or the right half of the equilateral triangle) in which the hypotenuse has length $2x$ and one leg has length $x$. The height must therefore be $$ y=\sqrt{(2x)^2-x^2} = \sqrt{4x^2-x^2}=\sqrt{3x^2}=x\sqrt{3}. $$