Triangle Inequality
In mathematics, the triangle inequality states that for any triangle, the sum of the lengths of any two sides must be greater than the length of the remaining side (and, if the setting is a Euclidean space, then the inequality is strict if the triangle is non-degenerate).
In Euclidean geometry and some other geometries the triangle inequality is a theorem about distances. In Euclidean geometry, for right triangles it is a consequence of the Pythagorean theorem, and for general triangles a consequence of the law of cosines, although it may be proven without these theorems. The inequality can be viewed intuitively in either R2 or R3.
The figure at the right shows three examples beginning with clear
inequality (top) and approaching equality (bottom). In the Euclidean
case, equality occurs only if the triangle has a 180° angle and two 0°
angles, making the three vertices collinear, as shown in the bottom example. Thus, in Euclidean geometry, the shortest distance between two points is a straight line.
In spherical geometry, the shortest distance between two points is an arc of a great circle,
but the triangle inequality holds provided the restriction is made that
the distance between two points on a sphere is the length of a minor
spherical line segment (that is, one with central angle in [0, π]) with
those endpoints.
The triangle inequality is a defining property of norms and measures of distance.
This property must be established as a theorem for any function
proposed for such purposes for each particular space: for example,
spaces such as the real numbers, Euclidean spaces, the Lp spaces (p ≥ 1), and inner product spaces.
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