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N-gons and their angles

    If a polygon is a 2D (flat) figure made up of line segments which are connected to form a closed chain, then a regular polygon or n-gon is a polygon of which all angles are the same and of which all sides have the same length. Some examples:

    • 4-gon: a square
    • 5-gon: a pentagon
    • 6-gon: a hexagon
    • Etc.
    For all n-gons, the following rules hold:

    • The inside angles are all:

        in degrees: 180(n - 2) / n

        in radians: π(n - 2) / n

    • The outside angles are all:

        in degrees: 360 - inside angle

        in radians: 2π / inside angle

    As the number of angles (n) of an n-gon increases, the inside angles of the n-gon also increase. However, the size of the inside angles does not increase linearly with the increase in the number of angles. I.e., if the number of angles doubles; e.g., from a square to an octagon, the size of the inside angles less than doubles (from 90° to 135°). The graph below shows this.

    So what is the largest possible inside angle of a regular polygon? Well, that would be the limit of 180(n - 2) / n with n approaching infinity:

    \[ \lim_{n \to \infty} \frac{180(n - 2)}{n} = 180 \]

    What sort of a polygon would that be?

    Play with this below:

    Number of sides (3 ≤ n ≤ 50):

      Inside angle (degrees) with increasing number of sides

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