Missing arrangements question

Rsimpson22

New member
Joined
Apr 20, 2020
Messages
1
FED27F71-948B-4D4A-8D0C-69FCD69D565C.jpeg
I’m having trouble figuring out the pattern of what goes third. I’m assuming it would be 4 triangle but i can’t see the pattern.
 
I have to say, I'm confused too. If we put 4 triangles there, then the number of triangles will be multiplied successively by 2, 2, 2, and then 4, which doesn't feel right; and the overall shapes might be triangle, rhombus, triangle, rhombus, rhombus. "Patterns" sometimes can't be recognized until they are explained by their maker! (And I wouldn't be very surprised to learn that this is a mistake.)

I sometimes wish curriculum writers didn't think this was math, because it isn't. It's guessing.
 
We can try the following that looks consistent for me :

Consider these shapes as a sequence Shapen starting from n=0

Shapen= Regular shape formed of 2n of Shape0

In this case Shape2 = 1587593131087.png
 
We can try the following that looks consistent for me :

Consider these shapes as a sequence Shapen starting from n=0

Shapen= Regular shape formed of 2n of Shape0

In this case Shape2 = View attachment 18120
I could quibble about the word "regular"; but the important thing is that you're saying that the last shape, Shape4, should have 24 = 16 little triangles. Does it? No!

As I pointed out, the number of little triangles is not doubled each time.
 
Top