几何证明计算器
结果
In-Depth Tutorial: 几何证明计算器
A geometric proof is a step-by-step argument that demonstrates the truth of a statement using definitions, postulates, and previously-proven theorems. The Geometric Proofs Calculator takes a "given" and a "to prove" statement and produces a complete two-column proof — step, reason, step, reason — using whichever postulates and theorems apply. This tutorial explains the structure of a two-column proof, what counts as a valid reason, and the most common proof types you'll encounter in geometry.
The two-column proof format
The traditional format for high-school geometry proofs has two columns:
| Statement | Reason |
|---|---|
| 1. AB = CD | Given |
| 2. CD = EF | Given |
| 3. AB = EF | Transitive property of equality |
Every step must have a justification on the right side. Acceptable justifications:
- Given — stated in the problem
- Definition — by the definition of a term (e.g. "definition of midpoint")
- Postulate — a fundamental assumption that doesn't need proof (e.g. SSS Postulate)
- Theorem — a previously-proven statement (e.g. "Vertical Angles Theorem")
- Property — an algebraic property (reflexive, symmetric, transitive, substitution, distributive)
- CPCTC — Corresponding Parts of Congruent Triangles are Congruent (used after proving two triangles congruent)
How the calculator works
Behind the scenes, the calculator uses a large language model trained on thousands of geometry proofs. You provide:
- The given: what conditions you start from. Example: "AB = CD, BC = DE, ABCD is a quadrilateral".
- The to prove: the statement you want to demonstrate. Example: "Triangle ABE ≅ Triangle CDE".
- Optional: a figure photo. The AI Vision system can read both the diagram and any printed labels.
The AI:
- Parses the given conditions and goal.
- Identifies which theorem(s) connect them.
- Builds the chain of statements, citing each justification.
- Outputs the proof in two-column format (or paragraph form on request).
Standard proof types
Most introductory geometry proofs fall into one of these categories:
1. Triangle congruence proofs
Use one of the 5 congruence postulates (SSS, SAS, ASA, AAS, HL) to prove two triangles congruent. Then CPCTC to extract specific corresponding-part equalities.
Typical structure: identify shared elements (reflexive sides, vertical angles, alternate interior angles), match them up, invoke the postulate, conclude congruence.
2. Triangle similarity proofs
Use one of the 3 similarity postulates (AA, SSS-sim, SAS-sim) to show two triangles similar. Then use proportionality of corresponding sides to derive specific ratios.
3. Parallel-line angle proofs
Establish that two lines are parallel by showing one of the equivalent angle conditions (corresponding equal, alternate interior equal, co-interior supplementary). Or use already-parallel lines to derive equal angles.
4. Quadrilateral classification proofs
Show that a quadrilateral is a parallelogram, rhombus, rectangle, square, kite, or isosceles trapezoid by demonstrating its defining properties.
Example: "Prove ABCD is a parallelogram." Strategy: show both pairs of opposite sides parallel, OR both pairs of opposite sides equal, OR both pairs of opposite angles equal, OR diagonals bisect each other — any ONE of these is sufficient.
5. Circle theorem proofs
Inscribed-angle theorem, tangent-line properties, chord-and-arc relationships, cyclic-quadrilateral angle theorems.
6. Segment and angle proofs
Bisectors, midpoints, perpendiculars, angle additions/subtractions. Often use algebraic properties (substitution, transitive) alongside geometric ones.
What makes a proof "rigorous"
A proof is rigorous when every step is justified by a previously-established statement — no leaps of intuition, no "obviously this is true". Standard high-school geometry grading rubrics expect:
- Each step numbered.
- Each step justified by name (e.g. "Vertical Angles Theorem", not "obvious").
- The progression logical — each step follows from prior ones via the cited theorem/property.
- The final step matches the "to prove" exactly.
Worked example
Given: AB ∥ CD; AB = CD.
To Prove: △ABE ≅ △CDE (where E is the intersection of diagonals AC and BD).
| Statement | Reason |
|---|---|
| 1. AB ∥ CD | Given |
| 2. AB = CD | Given |
| 3. ∠ABE ≅ ∠CDE | Alternate interior angles (AB ∥ CD with transversal BD) |
| 4. ∠BAE ≅ ∠DCE | Alternate interior angles (AB ∥ CD with transversal AC) |
| 5. △ABE ≅ △CDE | ASA — Step 3, Step 2, Step 4 |
The proof is 5 lines, each justified, leading from the given to the conclusion.
Tips for writing proofs by hand
- Start with given, end with goal. Make sure step 1 cites a "given" and the last step matches "to prove" exactly.
- Identify shared elements early. A shared side or shared angle (reflexive) is often a free step that connects the two parts of your proof.
- Look for parallel lines. They give you many angle equalities "for free" via the parallel-line theorems.
- Don't skip steps. Even algebraically obvious steps like substitution need to be cited. "A = B, B = C, therefore A = C" is three steps, not one.
- Write CPCTC, not "corresponding parts". The standard acronym is universally accepted.
When to use AI vs do it by hand
The AI is fastest for:
- Verifying you've found a correct proof (compare your work to the AI's).
- Generating a proof when you're stuck and need a starting strategy.
- Translating a textbook proof from paragraph form to two-column form (or vice versa).
- Reading a problem off a photo and getting an instant proof.
Do it by hand when:
- It's graded work and the teacher requires it.
- You're studying for an exam (writing proofs by hand cements the patterns).
- The proof is short — for 3-line proofs, AI is overkill.
Limitations
- AI may cite the wrong theorem name. The reasoning is usually correct but the explicit name (e.g. "Vertical Angles Theorem" vs "Linear Pair Theorem") can be inconsistent. Read critically.
- Long multi-stage proofs may be summarized. A proof requiring 12+ steps may be compressed to 6-7. If you need every step, ask for "complete two-column proof, no summarized steps".
- Non-Euclidean geometry not supported. The AI assumes standard Euclidean axioms. Spherical / hyperbolic / projective geometry proofs are out of scope.
常见问题解答 – 几何证明计算器
三角形全等(SSS、SAS、ASA、AAS、HL)、三角形相似(AA、SAS、SSS)、平行线角度证明、四边形分类证明(平行四边形、菱形、等腰梯形)、圆的定理证明以及线段/角平分线证明——涵盖所有标准的高中及大学入门几何证明。
是的——默认情况下,每一步均以两栏形式(陈述 | 理由)返回。根据要求,您也可以将同一证明以段落形式或流程图形式获取,以便可视化。
它分析给定条件和目标,然后选择最直接的路径——通常使用最少数量的公理和定理——并按名称引用每一步(例如:对顶角定理、SAS公理、内错角相等逆定理)。
是的——使用文件上传字段上传图形照片和印刷的问题陈述。AI视觉系统读取图形和文本,然后根据所见内容生成完整证明。
AI生成的证明对于标准问题通常是正确的,但有时会引用错误的定理名称或跳过论证步骤。务必批判性地阅读证明——尤其是用于评分的作业——并将AI Solve作为起点,而非最终答案。
每条证明消耗3个积分,无论是纯文本还是基于照片。新账户获得30个免费积分,足以完成10条完整证明。