Introduction, Polygons

Unit: Understanding Quadrilateral

Chapter: Introduction to Polygon

Reference: – What is a Polygon, Types of Polygons (Regular and Irregular), Convex and Concave Polygons, Classification by Number of Sides, Triangle, Quadrilateral, Pentagon, Hexagon, etc., Interior and Exterior Angles, Sum of Interior Angles of a Polygon, Sum of Exterior Angles of a Polygon, Diagonals of a Polygon, Solved Examples, Odd-One-Out Problems, Common Mistakes

After studying this chapter, you should be able to understand:

  • What is a Polygon
  • How to Classify Polygons by Number of Sides
  • Difference Between Convex and Concave Polygons
  • Difference Between Regular and Irregular Polygons
  • Calculate Sum of Interior Angles of a Polygon

Introduction to Polygons

Definition

A polygon is a closed two-dimensional figure formed by three or more straight line segments. The line segments are called sides, and the points where two sides meet are called vertices (singular: vertex). The word "polygon" comes from Greek: poly (many) and gon (angles).

When we study polygons, we essentially ask:

"What shape is formed by connecting straight line segments in a closed loop?"

Once we understand polygons, we can classify them, calculate their angles, and explore their properties.

Importance of Polygons

  • Found everywhere in nature and design (honeycombs, tiles, buildings)
  • Foundation for understanding more complex geometric shapes
  • Used in computer graphics, architecture, and engineering
  • Helps develop spatial reasoning and problem-solving skills

Example

A triangle is a polygon with 3 sides. A square is a polygon with 4 sides. A pentagon is a polygon with 5 sides. A circle is NOT a polygon because it has curved sides, not straight-line segments.

Subtopics

1. Parts of a Polygon

Sides: The straight-line segments that form the polygon

Vertices: The points where two sides meet (corners)

Diagonals: Line segments joining two non-adjacent vertices

Interior Angles: The angles inside the polygon at each vertex

Exterior Angles: The angles formed between a side and the extension of an adjacent side

2. Convex vs Concave Polygons

Convex Polygon: All interior angles are less than 180°. The polygon bulges outward. Any line segment connecting two points inside the polygon lies entirely inside the polygon.

Example: Square, rectangle, regular pentagon

Concave Polygon: At least one interior angle is greater than 180° (reflex angle). The polygon has a "dent" or "cave" inward.

Example: Arrowhead shape, a star-shaped polygon

Quick Test: If you can draw a line segment between two points inside the polygon that goes outside the polygon, it is concave.

3. Regular vs Irregular Polygons

Regular Polygon: All sides are equal in length, and all interior angles are equal.

Examples: Equilateral triangle, square, regular pentagon, regular hexagon

Irregular Polygon: Sides are not all equal, or angles are not all equal (or both).

Examples: Rectangle (sides not all equal), scalene triangle, any shape that is not regular

4. Sum of Interior Angles of a Polygon

The sum of the interior angles of a polygon depends only on the number of sides (n).

Formula: Sum of interior angles = (n – 2) × 180°

Why this works: A polygon with n sides can be divided into (n – 2) triangles, and each triangle has an angle sum of 180°.

Example 1 – Triangle (n=3): (3 – 2) × 180° = 1 × 180° = 180°

Example 2 – Quadrilateral (n=4): (4 – 2) × 180° = 2 × 180° = 360°

Example 3 – Pentagon (n=5): (5 – 2) × 180° = 3 × 180° = 540°

Example 4 – Hexagon (n=6): (6 – 2) × 180° = 4 × 180° = 720°

5. Measure of Each Interior Angle of a Regular Polygon

Since all interior angles are equal in a regular polygon:

Formula: Each interior angle = [(n – 2) × 180°] / n

Example 1 – Regular pentagon (n=5): (5-2)×180°/5 = 3×180°/5 = 540°/5 = 108°

Example 2 – Regular hexagon (n=6): (6-2)×180°/6 = 4×180°/6 = 720°/6 = 120°

Example 3 – Regular octagon (n=8): (8-2)×180°/8 = 6×180°/8 = 1080°/8 = 135°

6. Sum of Exterior Angles of a Polygon

The sum of the exterior angles of any polygon (convex) is always 360°, regardless of the number of sides.

Important: Take one exterior angle at each vertex (the angle formed by extending one side). The sum is always 360°.

Example: For a pentagon, if you extend each side and measure the exterior angles, they add up to 360°.

7. Each Exterior Angle of a Regular Polygon

Since all exterior angles are equal in a regular polygon:

Formula: Each exterior angle = 360° / n

Relationship: Each interior angle + each exterior angle = 180° (they are supplementary)

Example 1 – Regular pentagon: Each exterior angle = 360°/5 = 72° (check: interior 108° + exterior 72° = 180°)

Example 2 – Regular hexagon: Each exterior angle = 360°/6 = 60° (interior 120° + 60° = 180°)

8. Number of Diagonals in a Polygon

A diagonal connects two non-adjacent vertices.

Formula: Number of diagonals = n(n – 3)/2

Example 1 – Quadrilateral (n=4): 4(4-3)/2 = 4×1/2 = 2 diagonals

Example 2 – Pentagon (n=5): 5(5-3)/2 = 5×2/2 = 5 diagonals

Example 3 – Hexagon (n=6): 6(6-3)/2 = 6×3/2 = 9 diagonals

Solved Examples

Example 1 – Sum of Interior Angles: Find the sum of interior angles of an octagon.

Solution: n = 8, Sum = (8 – 2) × 180° = 6 × 180° = 1080°

Answer: 1080°

 

Example 2 – Each Interior Angle: Find each interior angle of a regular decagon (10 sides).

Solution: Sum = (10 – 2) × 180° = 8 × 180° = 1440°; Each = 1440°/10 = 144°

Answer: 144°

 

Example 3 – Each Exterior Angle: Find each exterior angle of a regular hexagon.

Solution: Each exterior angle = 360°/6 = 60°

Answer: 60°

 

Example 4 – Finding Number of Sides: Each interior angle of a regular polygon is 150°. How many sides does it have?

Solution: Each interior = [(n-2)×180°]/n = 150°

Multiply both sides by n: (n-2)×180 = 150n

180n – 360 = 150n

30n = 360 → n = 12

Answer: 12 sides

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Mistake 1 – Thinking a circle is a polygon
A circle has a curved boundary, not straight line segments.
Correct understanding: Polygons have only straight sides.

Mistake 2 – Using the wrong formula for interior angles
Sum of interior angles = (n – 2) × 180°, not (n – 2) × 360° or n × 180°.
Correct understanding: Memorize the correct formula.

Mistake 3 – Confusing convex and concave
All regular polygons are convex, but not all convex polygons are regular.
Correct understanding: Convex means all interior angles < 180°; concave means at least one angle > 180°.

Mistake 4 – Forgetting that a square is a regular polygon
Some students think only equilateral triangle is regular.
Correct understanding: Any polygon with all sides equal AND all angles equal is regular.

Mistake 5 – Misidentifying a rectangle as regular
A rectangle has all angles 90°, but sides are not all equal (unless it is a square).
Correct understanding: A square is regular; a rectangle that is not a square is irregular.

Mistake 6 – Incorrectly calculating number of diagonals
Using n(n-3) instead of n(n-3)/2 counts each diagonal twice.
Correct understanding: Divide by 2 because each diagonal has two endpoints.

Quick Reference Summary

Polygon: Closed 2D figure with straight sides (3 or more sides)

Convex Polygon: All interior angles < 180° (bulges outward)

Concave Polygon: At least one interior angle > 180° (has a dent)

Regular Polygon: All sides equal AND all angles equal

Sum of Interior Angles: (n – 2) × 180°

Each Interior Angle (Regular): [(n – 2) × 180°] / n

Sum of Exterior Angles: Always 360°

Each Exterior Angle (Regular): 360° / n

Number of Diagonals: n(n – 3)/2

Common Polygons: Triangle (3), Quadrilateral (4), Pentagon (5), Hexagon (6), Octagon (8)

 

Most Read

Class 8 math curriculum will teach students real numbers, rational numbers, and approximation of irrational numbers to rational numbers. In class 8 math, students are expected to know the four basic properties of numbers – the commutative, associative, closure, and distributive. Then students learn basic algebra, emphasizing the percentage, percentage comparison, and compound interest methods. As […]

Grade 8 Mathematics Curriculum   In Grade 8, instructional time should focus on three critical areas: (1) Formulating and reasoning about expressions and equations, including modeling an association in bivariate data with a linear equation, and solving linear equations and systems of linear equations; (2) Grasping the concept of a function and using functions to […]

Unit: Algebra – 1 Chapter: Solving Equations, Variable on One Side Reference: – Introduction to Linear Equations, what is a Variable, what is an Equation, Solving Equations with Variable on One Side, Balancing Method, Transposition Method, Verification of Solution, Equations with Fractions, Equations with Decimals, Word Problems, Solved Examples, Odd-One-Out Problems, Common Mistakes, Practice Grid […]