Sin Cos Tan Right Triangle Calculator

Calculate trig ratios with triangle details. Compare angles, sides, area, perimeter, and height values instantly. Download neat records for study and practical checks today.

Calculator Inputs

Reset

Example Data Table

Case Known Values Expected Output Use
Angle and hypotenuse A = 30°, hypotenuse = 10 Opposite = 5, adjacent = 8.6603 Ramp or ladder check
Two legs Opposite = 3, adjacent = 4 Hypotenuse = 5, tan(A) = 0.75 Classic triangle practice
Hypotenuse and one leg Adjacent = 12, hypotenuse = 13 Opposite = 5, sin(A) = 0.3846 Missing height estimate

Formula Used

The calculator uses standard right triangle relationships. Angle A is the reference angle.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter Angle A if you know it.
  2. Enter any one side with Angle A.
  3. Or enter any two sides without Angle A.
  4. Add a unit label, such as cm, m, or ft.
  5. Select the decimal precision.
  6. Press Calculate.
  7. Review the result above the form.
  8. Use CSV or PDF export for records.

Right Triangle Trigonometry Guide

A right triangle has one angle of ninety degrees. The other two angles are acute. Their sum is always ninety degrees. Sine, cosine, and tangent describe side relationships. They do not depend on triangle size. They depend on the chosen reference angle.

Why the ratios matter

Sine compares the opposite side with the hypotenuse. Cosine compares the adjacent side with the hypotenuse. Tangent compares the opposite side with the adjacent side. These ratios help you solve height, distance, slope, and direction problems. They also support engineering sketches and classroom work.

Choosing the reference angle

The calculator treats angle A as the reference angle. The opposite side faces that angle. The adjacent side touches that angle. The hypotenuse is always across from the right angle. If you switch to the other acute angle, opposite and adjacent sides trade roles. The hypotenuse stays the same.

Solving from sides

When two sides are known, the missing side comes from the Pythagorean theorem. Two legs create the hypotenuse by squaring both legs, adding them, and taking the square root. A hypotenuse and one leg create the other leg by subtracting squared values, then taking the square root. The angle then comes from inverse trigonometry.

Solving from an angle

When one acute angle and one side are known, every side can be found. A known hypotenuse gives legs through sine and cosine. A known adjacent side gives the opposite side with tangent. A known opposite side gives the adjacent side with tangent. The missing acute angle equals ninety degrees minus angle A.

Accuracy and practical use

Small rounding changes can affect final values. Use more decimal places for technical work. Use fewer decimals for quick homework checks. Always enter positive side lengths. Angle A must be greater than zero and less than ninety degrees. If two entered sides cannot form a right triangle, the calculator returns a warning.

Exports and records

The export buttons help you save the solved values. CSV works well for spreadsheets. PDF works well for sharing a compact report. The example table shows common input patterns. Use it to compare your own triangle with typical results. It also keeps repeated practice organized for later review and sharing.

FAQs

What does this calculator solve?

It solves sine, cosine, tangent, missing sides, missing acute angles, area, and perimeter for a right triangle.

Can I enter only an angle?

Yes. If you enter only Angle A, the calculator returns sin, cos, tan, and Angle B. Side lengths need at least one known side.

Can I enter only two sides?

Yes. Enter any two side lengths. The calculator finds the missing side, angles, trig ratios, area, and perimeter.

Which side is opposite?

The opposite side is the side facing Angle A. It does not touch Angle A.

Which side is adjacent?

The adjacent side touches Angle A and the right angle. It is not the hypotenuse.

What is the hypotenuse?

The hypotenuse is the longest side. It is always across from the ninety degree angle.

Why did I get a warning?

A warning appears when entered sides cannot closely form a right triangle. Check values, units, and typing errors.

Can I download the result?

Yes. Use the CSV button for spreadsheet records. Use the PDF button for a simple printable report.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.