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    Question: What do V, E, and F represent here?

    Module 3 Day 16 Your Turn Part 1
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    • The Blade DancerT
      The Blade Dancer M0★ M1★ M2★ M3★ M4 M5
      last edited by debbie

      What does V, E, and F represent here? I'm a bit confused because I'm pretty sure F is the middle pentagon, but I don't know about the rest.

      The Blade Dancer
      League of Legends, Valorant: Harlem Charades (#NA1)
      Discord: Change nickname if gay#7585

      debbieD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
      • The Blade DancerT
        The Blade Dancer M0★ M1★ M2★ M3★ M4 M5
        last edited by

        Lol my strategy doing this question:

        pentagon in middle = 5 faces
        pyramid with 3 faces per edge of pentagon = 15 faces
        side triangles with 2 faces each = 10 faces
        assuming there is a whole back layer to the shape = x2
        (5+15+10) x 2 = 30 x 2 = 60

        The Blade Dancer
        League of Legends, Valorant: Harlem Charades (#NA1)
        Discord: Change nickname if gay#7585

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        • debbieD
          debbie ADMIN M0★ M1 M5 @The Blade Dancer
          last edited by debbie

          @The-Blade-Dancer Thank you for this post; it's probably a good idea for us to annotate the video with the definitions of these variables, \(V, E, \text{ and } F,\) and this is something we will put down to do in the future! 👍

          I think you figured this out already! 🙂 At any rate, I'll just give a quick answer.

          For any 3-D shape made up of flat regular polygons (called a polyhedron), it's convenient to count its number of faces, vertices, and edges.

          \(V\) is the number of vertices in the polyhedron.
          \(E\) is the number of edges in the polyhedron.
          \(F\) is the number of faces in the polyhedron.

          M3W4D16-y-part-1-v-e-f.png

          For a cube, \(V = 8, E = 12,\) and \(F = 6.\)

          An edge is usually shared by two faces; a vertex can be shared by multiple faces.

          If you count the number of faces and multiply by the sides per face, you will be counting each edge of the polyhedron twice.

          If you count the number of faces and multiply by the number of corners per face, you will be counting each vertex of the polyhedron multiple times.

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          • debbieD
            debbie ADMIN M0★ M1 M5 @The Blade Dancer
            last edited by debbie

            @The-Blade-Dancer 👏 That's a really good way! 🙂 I like it!

             
            M3W4D16-y-question-screenshot.png
             
            Another slight variation on this method is to say that the 3-D figure is composed of the same repeated building-block, the pyramid with five triangular slant faces.

             
            M3W4D16-y-buildling-block-pyramid.png
             

            On our side of the shape, there is a big 5-pointed-star looking at us, and it's composed of \(6\) of these building-block pyramids, so the 5-pointed-star contains \(30\) faces. The side facing opposite from us contains the same 5-pointed-star, simply rotated, so it provides another \(30\) faces.

            The total is \(30 + 30 = \boxed{60 \text{ faces}}.\)

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