How to Construct Regular Polygons Using a Circle

Draw a straight line using the protractor., Align the protractor with both 0° and 180°on the center line, then mark the center point. , Trace the semicircle along the protractor from 0 ° to 180°. , Put the protractor on the other side of the center...

12 Steps 1 min read Medium

Step-by-Step Guide

  1. Step 1: Draw a straight line using the protractor.

    This will be the center line of your circle (dividing it into hemispheres).
  2. Step 2: Align the protractor with both 0° and 180°on the center line

    ,,,, Since a circle has 360°, divide 360° by n, the number of vertices (or sides) to get α. α=360°/n α is the measured angle between lines drawn from the center of the circle to adjacent vertices.

    For a dodecagon, n=12.

    A dodecagon has 12 sides and 12 vertices, so 360° divided by 12 comes out to be 30° and α=30°. , Using the protractor, mark all the multiples of the angle α calculated above. , For a dodecagon there should be 12 marks and 12 sides because it has 12 vertices.

    Don’t overlap the line segments.

    If your points are outside of the circle, then simply mark another point along the radial line from the center onto the circle for each point and then join them. , If they are, you can rub out the circumscribed circle. ,
  3. Step 3: then mark the center point.

  4. Step 4: Trace the semicircle along the protractor from 0 ° to 180°.

  5. Step 5: Put the protractor on the other side of the center line

  6. Step 6: again with the both the 0°and 180° protractor markings on the center line.

  7. Step 7: Complete the circle by tracing along the protractor.

  8. Step 8: Calculate the angle between adjacent vertices

  9. Step 9: Mark a point for each of the successive angles.

  10. Step 10: Join the points marked on the circle with a line segment.

  11. Step 11: Check to see that the sides are the same length.

  12. Step 12: Finished.

Detailed Guide

This will be the center line of your circle (dividing it into hemispheres).

,,,, Since a circle has 360°, divide 360° by n, the number of vertices (or sides) to get α. α=360°/n α is the measured angle between lines drawn from the center of the circle to adjacent vertices.

For a dodecagon, n=12.

A dodecagon has 12 sides and 12 vertices, so 360° divided by 12 comes out to be 30° and α=30°. , Using the protractor, mark all the multiples of the angle α calculated above. , For a dodecagon there should be 12 marks and 12 sides because it has 12 vertices.

Don’t overlap the line segments.

If your points are outside of the circle, then simply mark another point along the radial line from the center onto the circle for each point and then join them. , If they are, you can rub out the circumscribed circle. ,

About the Author

C

Carl Long

With a background in lifestyle and practical guides, Carl Long brings 5 years of hands-on experience to every article. Carl believes in making complex topics accessible to everyone.

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