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Calculadora de transversal a líneas paralelas

Encuentre los 8 ángulos formados cuando una transversal cruza líneas paralelas: alternos internos, co-internos, correspondientes y más.

Revisado por [email protected], Geometry Calculator Developer & Online Math Educator Última actualización April 24, 2026

Calculadora de transversal a líneas paralelas

Fórmulas utilizadas en Calculadora de transversal a líneas paralelas

Corresponding: equal
Alternate interior/exterior: equal
Co-interior (same-side): supplementary = 180°

In-Depth Tutorial: Calculadora de transversal a líneas paralelas

When a single straight line (called a transversal) crosses two parallel lines, it creates exactly 8 angles — and those 8 angles fall into 4 predictable relationship types: corresponding, alternate interior, alternate exterior, and co-interior. Knowing just ONE of the 8 angles is enough to find all the others. This tutorial walks through what each relationship is, why it holds when the lines are parallel, how to use them in proofs, and the converse theorems that let you prove lines parallel from their angles.

The setup

Imagine two horizontal parallel lines, ℓ₁ and ℓ₂. A third line — the transversal — cuts across both. At each intersection point, 4 angles form, for a total of 8.

Label them: at the upper intersection (where the transversal meets ℓ₁), call the angles 1 (upper left), 2 (upper right), 3 (lower left), 4 (lower right). At the lower intersection (transversal meets ℓ₂), label angles 5, 6, 7, 8 similarly.

The 4 angle relationships

1. Corresponding angles — equal

"Corresponding" means in the same position relative to the transversal at each intersection. The pairs are: (1, 5), (2, 6), (3, 7), (4, 8).

When the lines are parallel, corresponding angles are equal. Visually, they look like "copies" of each other shifted along the transversal.

2. Alternate interior angles — equal

"Interior" means between the two parallel lines. "Alternate" means on opposite sides of the transversal. The pairs are: (3, 6) and (4, 5).

Alternate interior angles are equal when ℓ₁ ∥ ℓ₂.

3. Alternate exterior angles — equal

"Exterior" means outside the two parallel lines. "Alternate" again means opposite sides of the transversal. The pairs are: (1, 8) and (2, 7).

Alternate exterior angles are equal when ℓ₁ ∥ ℓ₂.

4. Co-interior (same-side interior) angles — supplementary

"Same-side interior" means between the parallel lines AND on the same side of the transversal. Pairs: (3, 5) and (4, 6).

Co-interior angles are supplementary — they sum to 180° when ℓ₁ ∥ ℓ₂. They are also sometimes called "consecutive interior" or "allied" angles depending on the textbook.

The 8-angle map

Once you know any ONE of the 8 angles, the other 7 follow:

  • Same vertex, supplementary: any two angles forming a straight line at the same intersection sum to 180°.
  • Same vertex, vertical: opposite angles at the same intersection are equal (vertical angles theorem).
  • Across the parallel lines: corresponding, alternate interior, alternate exterior all give equal angles; co-interior gives supplementary.

Result: the 8 angles consist of just 2 distinct values that alternate in a checkerboard pattern (one acute value, one obtuse, summing to 180°).

Why are these relationships true?

Strictly, the relationships follow from one foundational axiom (Euclid's 5th postulate or one of its equivalents) plus straightforward angle reasoning.

Corresponding angles equal is often taken as the defining property of "parallel" in modern textbooks. From corresponding equal, the other three follow:

  • Alternate interior angles equal: corresponding + vertical angles.
  • Alternate exterior angles equal: same.
  • Co-interior supplementary: corresponding + linear pair (180° supplement).

Worked example

Two parallel lines are crossed by a transversal. One of the 8 angles is given as 65°.

Then in the checkerboard pattern, every angle that is corresponding, alternate interior, or alternate exterior to the 65° angle is also 65°. Every angle that is a linear pair, co-interior, or vertical-to-corresponding to it is 115° (= 180° − 65°).

So the 8 angles are: four copies of 65° and four copies of 115°, arranged in the checkerboard.

The converse theorems

Each "if parallel then angles equal" theorem has a converse: "if angles equal then parallel". These are how you PROVE two lines are parallel from angle measurements.

  • Converse of corresponding angles: if a pair of corresponding angles are equal, the lines are parallel.
  • Converse of alternate interior: if a pair of alternate interior angles are equal, the lines are parallel.
  • Converse of co-interior: if a pair of co-interior angles are supplementary, the lines are parallel.

These converses are essential in geometric proofs. To show two lines are parallel, you typically (1) identify or construct a transversal, (2) measure or derive one of the angle pairs above, (3) invoke the converse theorem.

Common proof patterns

Parallel-line angle theorems appear in dozens of standard proofs:

  • Parallelogram diagonals split it into two congruent triangles (uses alternate interior angles + reflexive shared diagonal → ASA).
  • Sum of triangle angles = 180° (the classical proof drops a parallel line through the triangle's vertex and uses alternate interior angles).
  • Midpoint theorem of a triangle (connecting midpoints of two sides creates a parallel segment to the third side by similar-triangles + parallel-line angle arguments).
  • Cyclic quadrilateral inscribed-angle relationships (uses parallel chords + angle theorems).

Are the relationships only for parallel lines?

Yes. If the two lines are NOT parallel, none of the four relationships hold — the angles can be anything. The relationships are equivalences with parallelism: "lines are parallel" ⟺ "corresponding angles are equal".

This bidirectional link is what makes parallel-line angle reasoning so powerful. You can use it in either direction: knowing the lines are parallel gives you angle equalities for free, and conversely, knowing certain angle equalities gives you parallelism for free.

Common mistakes

  • Treating co-interior as equal. Co-interior angles are SUPPLEMENTARY (sum to 180°), not equal. Only the other three relationships give equality.
  • Mixing up alternate interior and co-interior. Both involve "interior" (between the parallel lines). "Alternate" = opposite sides of transversal (equal). "Co-interior" = same side of transversal (supplementary).
  • Forgetting that the converse needs you to identify a transversal first. Two arbitrary lines have many angle relationships; only when you single out a transversal cutting both do the parallel-line theorems apply.
  • Assuming lines are parallel from the diagram. The SAT and many textbook problems explicitly state "the figure may not be drawn to scale". Lines that appear parallel may not be unless the problem says so.

Preguntas frecuentes – Calculadora de transversal a líneas paralelas

Se forman ocho ángulos en cuatro tipos de relaciones: correspondientes (iguales), alternos internos (iguales), alternos externos (iguales) y consecutivos/interiores del mismo lado (suplementarios, cuya suma es 180°).

Introduce cualquiera de los 8 ángulos y la calculadora devuelve los 8 utilizando las relaciones angulares anteriores.

Una transversal es una recta que corta a dos o más rectas. Cuando corta a rectas paralelas, crea pares de ángulos iguales y suplementarios predecibles.

Sí — gratis e ilimitado.