Transitive Property of Equality Variation 2
Sides of an Equilateral Triangle
Sides of an Equilateral Triangle 2
Distance Property 1
Angle Symmetry Example 2
Collinear Angles Property 9
Transitive Property Application 2
Angles of an Isosceles Triangle
Angles of an Isosceles Triangle 5
Angles of an Equilateral Triangle
Distance Property 2
Transitive Property of Equality Variation 3
Angle Symmetry Property 5
Angles of an Isosceles Triangle 4
Angles of an Isosceles Triangle 4 A
Angles of an Equilateral Triangle 2
Angles of an Equilateral Triangle 3
Transitive Property of Equality Variation 1
Propagated Transitive Property 3
Angles of an Equilateral Triangle 4
Collinear Then 180
Subtract Both Sides
Add Term to Both Sides 6
Subtract Both Sides 2
Add Term to Both Sides 7
Vertical Angles
Angle Addition Theorem
Collinear Angles B
Exterior Angle
Exterior Angle B
Collinear Angles Property 10
Collinear Angles Property 3
Collinear Angles Property 3 B
Collinear Angles Property 3 C
alternate interior angles then parallel
ParallelThenAIA
Parallelthenaiashort
Commutative Property Example 2
Commutative Property Variation 1
Substitution 2
Substitution 8
Angle Symmetry B
Substitution Example 10
Substitute First Term
Triangles Sum to 180
Substitute 2
Add Term to Both Sides 2
Multiplicative Identity 2
Distributive Property 4
Multiplicative Property of Equality Variation 1
Addition Theorem
Add Three
Divide Both Sides
Multiplicative Property of Equality Variation 2
Division is Commutative
Associative Property
Divide Each Side
Equilateral Triangle 60

Proof: Transitive Property of Equality Variation 1

Let's prove the following theorem:

if the following are true:
  • a = c
  • b = c

then a = b

This theorem is very similar to the Transitive Property of Equality. The only difference is that the terms on the second condition are switched.

We begin the proof by listing any givens or assumptions, which are statements that we can assume are true.

Each row in the proof table contains a claim, which is a statement that can be derived from properties, givens, and other derived statements. The reason tells us how or why we were able to make the claim.

Proof:

View as a tree | View dependent proofs | Try proving it

Given
1 a = c
2 b = c
Proof Table
# Claim Reason
1 c = b if b = c, then c = b
2 a = b if a = c and c = b, then a = b
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