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Squaring sides (Posted on 2005-05-04) Difficulty: 4 of 5
Take any convex quadrilateral ABCD, with diagonals AC and BD. Pick E so ABCE is a parallelogram. Prove that AB²+BC²+CD²+DA²= AC²+BD²+DE².

Given the same quadrilateral, let P and Q be the midpoints of AC and BD. Now prove that AB²+BC²+CD²+DA²= AC²+BD²+4PQ².

See The Solution Submitted by Federico Kereki    
Rating: 4.0000 (2 votes)

Comments: ( Back to comment list | You must be logged in to post comments.)
re: The analytic geometry way (part 1 only) Comment 4 of 4 |
(In reply to The analytic geometry way (part 1 only) by Jer)

This is how I was trying to solve part 1 as well, but I got stuck.  I think my problem was that I chose A to be at the origin and B on the x-axis.  I think it makes a difference which points you put at the origin and such.


But thanks to you my solution to the second part is now valid!  Yay!  Donkey Kong, Yay!

  Posted by nikki on 2005-05-06 12:31:16
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