Right Triangle Trigonometry Calculator — All 6 Trig Functions & Cofunctions

Comprehensive right triangle trig calculator. Enter any 2 known values (sides or angles) and get all 6 trig functions, cofunction identities, complementary angles, area, perimeter, inradius, and ci...

About the Right Triangle Trigonometry Calculator — All 6 Trig Functions & Cofunctions

This comprehensive right-triangle trigonometry calculator is designed for students and professionals who need complete trig information from minimal input. Enter any two known values — two sides, or one side and one acute angle — and the calculator fills in everything: all three sides, both acute angles, all six trigonometric ratios for each angle, cofunction pairs, and key Pythagorean identities verified numerically.

The six trigonometric functions — sine, cosine, tangent, cosecant, secant, and cotangent — are the foundation of trigonometry. In a right triangle, each is defined as a ratio of two sides relative to a given acute angle. The mnemonic SOH-CAH-TOA captures the three primary functions: sin = opposite/hypotenuse, cos = adjacent/hypotenuse, tan = opposite/adjacent. The reciprocal functions (csc, sec, cot) are simply the flipped ratios.

A powerful property of right triangles is the cofunction identity: since the two acute angles are complementary (they sum to 90°), sin A = cos B, tan A = cot B, and sec A = csc B. This calculator verifies each identity numerically, making it a perfect study tool when learning trigonometric relationships.

Beyond trig ratios, the calculator reports geometric properties: area (½ab), perimeter, the inradius r = (a + b − c)/2 (unique to right triangles), and the circumradius R = c/2 (because the hypotenuse is always a diameter of the circumscribed circle). Visual bars and preset triangles round out the experience.

Why Use This Right Triangle Trigonometry Calculator — All 6 Trig Functions & Cofunctions?

This tool is useful when the goal is not just to solve the triangle but to understand the trigonometry attached to it. From a small set of inputs, it produces all six trig functions for both acute angles, then verifies the cofunction identities numerically. That gives students a way to check more than a single answer: they can confirm reciprocal relationships, complementary-angle identities, and the Pythagorean identity in the same workflow.

It also helps reduce common confusion between side solving and trig interpretation. Instead of manually switching between SOH-CAH-TOA, reciprocal functions, and inverse trig steps, you can inspect a complete table tied to one concrete triangle. That makes the calculator useful for lessons, review packets, exam prep, and technical work where a right-triangle model underpins a larger calculation.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Select input mode: two sides or one side + one angle.
  2. For two sides, choose whether you know both legs or one leg and the hypotenuse.
  3. Enter the known values.
  4. Or load a preset (3-4-5, 45-45-90, 30-60-90, etc.).
  5. Review all computed sides, angles, area, and perimeter.
  6. Study the complete trig ratio tables for both acute angles.
  7. Check the cofunction identity verification table.

Formula

sin A = a/c cos A = b/c tan A = a/b csc A = c/a sec A = c/b cot A = b/a Cofunction: sin A = cos(90°−A) = cos B Pythagorean identity: sin²A + cos²A = 1 Area = ½ab Inradius = (a+b−c)/2 Circumradius = c/2

Example Calculation

Result: c = 5, A ≈ 36.87°, sin A = 0.6, cos A = 0.8, tan A = 0.75

Hypotenuse = √(9+16) = 5. sin A = 3/5 = 0.6, cos A = 4/5 = 0.8, tan A = 3/4 = 0.75. Cofunctions: sin A = cos B = 0.6, since A + B = 90°.

Tips & Best Practices

Building Trig Intuition from One Triangle

A single right triangle contains an entire network of trig relationships. Once the side lengths and acute angles are known, every sine, cosine, tangent, cosecant, secant, and cotangent value follows from the same geometry. Seeing all six functions side by side helps you move past memorized definitions and notice how each ratio changes when you shift attention from angle A to angle B.

Why Cofunction Identities Matter

Cofunction identities are often introduced as rules to memorize, but they become much clearer when you watch them emerge from complementary angles in a right triangle. Because $A + B = 90^circ$, the side opposite one acute angle is adjacent to the other. That is why $sin A = cos B$, $ an A = cot B$, and similar pairings work. The verification table in this calculator turns those statements into concrete numeric checks.

Study Uses Beyond Basic SOH-CAH-TOA

This kind of full trig output is especially useful during review sessions and exam preparation. You can test special triangles, compare decimal approximations, and confirm that reciprocal and Pythagorean identities still hold after rounding. Teachers can use the presets to generate examples quickly, and students can use the same output to connect textbook identities with the geometry of an actual right triangle.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does SOH-CAH-TOA mean?

It is a mnemonic for remembering the three primary trig ratios: Sin = Opposite/Hypotenuse, Cos = Adjacent/Hypotenuse, Tan = Opposite/Adjacent. Use this as a practical reminder before finalizing the result.

What are cofunction identities?

For complementary angles A and B (A + B = 90°): sin A = cos B, tan A = cot B, sec A = csc B. Each function of one angle equals the cofunction of the other.

What is the difference between csc and arcsin?

csc A = 1/sin A (the reciprocal of sine, a ratio). arcsin(x) is the inverse sine function — it returns the angle whose sine is x. They are completely different operations.

Why is sin²A + cos²A always 1?

From the Pythagorean theorem: a² + b² = c². Dividing both sides by c² gives (a/c)² + (b/c)² = 1, which is sin²A + cos²A = 1.

Can I use degrees and radians?

This calculator works in degrees. To convert: radians = degrees × π/180. Common values: 30° = π/6, 45° = π/4, 60° = π/3, 90° = π/2.

What is the circumradius of a right triangle?

The circumradius R = c/2 (half the hypotenuse). This is because the hypotenuse subtends a 90° inscribed angle, so it must be a diameter of the circumscribed circle.

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