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Four points on a Plane (Posted on 2004-11-21) Difficulty: 2 of 5
How many ways can four points be arranged in a plane so that the six distances between pairs of points take on only two different values?

See The Solution Submitted by Erik O.    
Rating: 4.1429 (7 votes)

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re: Could Become Interesting | Comment 2 of 15 |
(In reply to by )

We can probably stick to the Euclidean plane. We are measuring sides, not angles, And in any case the figures can be drawn small enough so that the effects of a non-Euclidean would be negligible.

The imaginary plane is Cartesian (analytic algebra) concept, not a geometric one, and is based on the Euclidean plane.
  Posted by TomM on 2004-11-21 19:22:13

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