MCP HubMCP Hub
Retour aux compétences

solve-trigonometric-problem

pjt222
Mis à jour 2 days ago
7 vues
17
2
17
Voir sur GitHub
Designgeneral

À propos

Cette compétence résout systématiquement les équations trigonométriques et les problèmes de triangles en utilisant les identités, les lois des sinus/cosinus et les fonctions inverses. Elle traite des tâches telles que la résolution de triangles à partir de données partielles sur les côtés/angles (SSS, SAS, ASA) et la vérification d'identités. Les développeurs doivent l'utiliser pour déterminer des angles inconnus, modéliser des problèmes du monde réel ou effectuer des analyses sur le cercle unité.

Installation rapide

Claude Code

Recommandé
Principal
npx skills add pjt222/agent-almanac -a claude-code
Commande PluginAlternatif
/plugin add https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac
Git CloneAlternatif
git clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac.git ~/.claude/skills/solve-trigonometric-problem

Copiez et collez cette commande dans Claude Code pour installer cette compétence

Documentation

Solve Trigonometric Problem

Systematic solve trigonometric equations, triangle problems, identity verifications. Classify problem type. Select appropriate strategy. Apply identities and laws. Verify solutions against domain and range constraints.

When Use

  • Solve trigonometric equations for unknown angles or values
  • Resolve triangles given partial information (SSS, SAS, ASA, AAS, SSA)
  • Verify or prove trigonometric identities
  • Apply trigonometry to real-world problems (surveying, physics, engineering)
  • Simplify complex trigonometric expressions

Inputs

  • Required: Problem statement (equation, triangle data, identity to verify, or application scenario)
  • Required: Desired output form (exact values, decimal approximations, general solution, specific interval)
  • Optional: Angle unit convention (radians or degrees; default: radians)
  • Optional: Domain restriction (e.g., [0, 2*pi), [0, 360), all reals)
  • Optional: Required precision for numerical answers (e.g., 4 decimal places)

Steps

Step 1: Classify Problem Type

Determine which category problem falls into. Each needs different strategy.

  1. Trigonometric equation: Solve for unknown angle(s) in an equation involving trigonometric functions.

    • Sub-types: linear in one trig function, quadratic in one trig function, multiple-angle, mixed functions, parametric.
  2. Triangle resolution: Given partial information about a triangle, find all remaining sides and angles.

    • Sub-types by given data: SSS, SAS, ASA, AAS, SSA (ambiguous case).
  3. Identity verification: Prove that a trigonometric equation holds for all values in its domain.

    • Sub-types: algebraic manipulation, sum-to-product, product-to-sum, half-angle, double-angle.
  4. Application problem: Extract a trigonometric model from a real-world scenario.

    • Sub-types: periodic modeling, angle of elevation/depression, bearing/navigation, harmonic motion.

Document the classification:

Problem: Solve 2*sin^2(x) - sin(x) - 1 = 0 for x in [0, 2*pi).
Classification: Trigonometric equation, quadratic in sin(x).

Got: Clear classification with problem sub-type identified, directly determines solution strategy in Step 2.

If fail: Problem does not fit neat into one category? May be compound problem. Decompose into sub-problems, classify each, solve sequential. Example: "find area of triangle ABC given two sides and included angle" combines triangle resolution (SAS) with area formula application.

Step 2: Select Solution Strategy

Choose appropriate method based on classification from Step 1.

For trigonometric equations:

Equation TypeStrategy
Linear in sin(x) or cos(x)Isolate the trig function, apply inverse
Quadratic in sin(x) or cos(x)Substitute u = sin(x), solve quadratic, back-substitute
Multiple angle (sin(2x), cos(3x))Solve for the inner argument, then divide
Mixed functions (sin and cos)Convert to single function using identities
FactorableFactor and solve each factor = 0

For triangle resolution:

Given DataPrimary Tool
SSSLaw of cosines (find largest angle first)
SASLaw of cosines (find opposite side), then law of sines
ASAAngle sum = pi, then law of sines
AASAngle sum = pi, then law of sines
SSALaw of sines (check ambiguous case: 0, 1, or 2 solutions)

For identity verification:

  • Work on one side only (typically the more complex side)
  • Convert everything to sin and cos
  • Apply fundamental identities: Pythagorean, reciprocal, quotient
  • Apply sum/difference, double-angle, half-angle formulas as needed
  • Factor and simplify until both sides match

For application problems:

  • Draw a diagram and label all known and unknown quantities
  • Identify the trigonometric relationship (right triangle, oblique triangle, periodic function)
  • Set up the equation and solve using the appropriate method above

Document the chosen strategy:

Strategy: Substitute u = sin(x), solve 2u^2 - u - 1 = 0,
back-substitute, and find x in [0, 2*pi).

Got: Specific, named strategy matches problem classification, with key formula or identity identified.

If fail: No single strategy applies? Try combining approaches. Equations mixing sin and cos? Try: (a) Pythagorean substitution, (b) tangent half-angle substitution t = tan(x/2), or (c) auxiliary angle method (asin(x) + bcos(x) = R*sin(x + phi)). Stuck on identity? Try working from both sides toward common middle expression.

Step 3: Apply Identities and Laws Systematic

Execute chosen strategy step by step.

Key identity families to draw from:

  1. Pythagorean: sin^2(x) + cos^2(x) = 1, 1 + tan^2(x) = sec^2(x), 1 + cot^2(x) = csc^2(x)

  2. Double-angle: sin(2x) = 2sin(x)cos(x), cos(2x) = cos^2(x) - sin^2(x) = 2cos^2(x) - 1 = 1 - 2sin^2(x)

  3. Sum/difference: sin(A +/- B) = sin(A)*cos(B) +/- cos(A)*sin(B), cos(A +/- B) = cos(A)*cos(B) -/+ sin(A)*sin(B)

  4. Law of sines: a/sin(A) = b/sin(B) = c/sin(C) = 2R

  5. Law of cosines: c^2 = a^2 + b^2 - 2ab*cos(C)

  6. Half-angle: sin(x/2) = +/-sqrt((1 - cos(x))/2), cos(x/2) = +/-sqrt((1 + cos(x))/2)

Show each algebraic step explicitly:

2*sin^2(x) - sin(x) - 1 = 0
Let u = sin(x):
  2u^2 - u - 1 = 0
  (2u + 1)(u - 1) = 0
  u = -1/2  or  u = 1
Back-substitute:
  sin(x) = -1/2  or  sin(x) = 1

For triangle resolution, compute intermediate values and carry sufficient precision:

Given: a = 7, b = 10, C = 38 degrees (SAS)
Law of cosines: c^2 = 49 + 100 - 2(7)(10)*cos(38)
  c^2 = 149 - 140*cos(38) = 149 - 110.312 = 38.688
  c = 6.220
Law of sines: sin(A)/7 = sin(38)/6.220
  sin(A) = 7*sin(38)/6.220 = 0.6930
  A = 43.78 degrees
  B = 180 - 38 - 43.78 = 98.22 degrees

Got: Complete chain of algebraic steps from initial equation or data to intermediate result, every identity application labeled.

If fail: Identity application leads to more complex expression rather than simpler? Reconsider strategy. Common recovery moves: (a) try converting to exponential form using Euler's formula for complex identity proofs, (b) multiply both sides by conjugate, (c) use substitution to reduce degree. Numerical computation produces unexpected values? Verify using independent calculation path.

Step 4: Solve and Check Domain/Range Constraints

Extract all solutions, filter against problem's domain.

  1. Find the reference angle. For each value of the trigonometric function, determine the reference angle using inverse functions:
sin(x) = -1/2  =>  reference angle = pi/6
sin(x) = 1     =>  reference angle = pi/2
  1. Enumerate all solutions in the fundamental period. Use the sign and quadrant rules:
sin(x) = -1/2:
  x is in Q3 or Q4 (sin negative)
  x = pi + pi/6 = 7*pi/6
  x = 2*pi - pi/6 = 11*pi/6

sin(x) = 1:
  x = pi/2
  1. Apply domain restriction. Keep only solutions in the specified interval:
Domain: [0, 2*pi)
Solutions: x = pi/2, 7*pi/6, 11*pi/6
  1. Write the general solution (if requested):
General solution:
  x = pi/2 + 2*k*pi,  k in Z
  x = 7*pi/6 + 2*k*pi,  k in Z
  x = 11*pi/6 + 2*k*pi,  k in Z
  1. Check range constraints. For inverse function problems, verify the output is in the principal value range. For triangle problems, verify all angles are positive and sum to pi (or 180 degrees), and all sides are positive.

  2. Handle the ambiguous case (SSA). When using law of sines with SSA data:

    • If sin(B) > 1: no solution.
    • If sin(B) = 1: one solution (right angle).
    • If sin(B) < 1 and the given angle is acute: two possible solutions (check if both yield valid triangles).
    • If the given angle is obtuse or right: at most one solution.

Got: Complete, explicit enumerated solution set respects all domain and range constraints, with ambiguous case handled if applicable.

If fail: No solutions exist in specified domain? Verify equation was set up correct. Too many solutions appear? Check whether extraneous solutions were introduced (e.g., by squaring both sides of equation). Always substitute each candidate solution back into original equation.

Step 5: Verify Solution Numerical

Confirm each solution by substitution into original equation or by independent computation.

  1. Substitute each solution into the original equation and verify equality:
Check x = 7*pi/6:
  sin(7*pi/6) = -1/2
  2*(-1/2)^2 - (-1/2) - 1 = 2*(1/4) + 1/2 - 1 = 1/2 + 1/2 - 1 = 0. VERIFIED.

Check x = 11*pi/6:
  sin(11*pi/6) = -1/2
  2*(1/4) + 1/2 - 1 = 0. VERIFIED.

Check x = pi/2:
  sin(pi/2) = 1
  2*(1) - 1 - 1 = 0. VERIFIED.
  1. For triangle problems, verify using an independent law:
Verify triangle: a=7, b=10, c=6.220, A=43.78, B=98.22, C=38
Check law of sines: a/sin(A) = 7/sin(43.78) = 7/0.6913 = 10.126
                    b/sin(B) = 10/sin(98.22) = 10/0.9897 = 10.104
                    c/sin(C) = 6.220/sin(38) = 6.220/0.6157 = 10.102
Ratios approximately equal (within rounding). VERIFIED.
Check angle sum: 43.78 + 98.22 + 38 = 180. VERIFIED.
  1. For identity proofs, verify with a specific numerical value:
Verify identity: sin(2x) = 2*sin(x)*cos(x)
Let x = pi/3:
  LHS: sin(2*pi/3) = sin(120) = sqrt(3)/2
  RHS: 2*sin(pi/3)*cos(pi/3) = 2*(sqrt(3)/2)*(1/2) = sqrt(3)/2
  LHS = RHS. VERIFIED.
  1. Document the final answer in the requested format:
Solution: x in {pi/2, 7*pi/6, 11*pi/6} for x in [0, 2*pi).

Got: Every solution passes substitution verification. Triangle solutions satisfy both law of sines and law of cosines. Identity proofs confirmed by at least one numerical test.

If fail: Solution fails verification? Extraneous. Remove from solution set, re-examine step where introduced. Common sources of extraneous solutions: squaring both sides (introduces sign ambiguity), multiplying by expression that could be zero, or selecting wrong quadrant for reference angle.

Checks

  • Problem classified into specific type and sub-type
  • Solution strategy explicit named and matches problem type
  • Every identity or law application labeled with name
  • All algebraic steps shown (no jumps in logic)
  • Domain and range constraints explicit applied
  • Ambiguous case addressed for SSA triangle problems
  • Every solution verified by substitution into original equation
  • Triangle solutions cross-checked with independent law
  • Final answer stated in requested format (exact, decimal, general, interval-specific)
  • Angle units consistent throughout (no mixing radians and degrees)

Pitfalls

  • Lose solutions by dividing by trig function: Divide both sides by sin(x)? Discards all solutions where sin(x) = 0. Always factor instead of dividing: write sin(x) * f(x) = 0, solve each factor separate.

  • Extraneous solutions from squaring: Squaring both sides of sin(x) = cos(x) gives sin^2(x) = cos^2(x), which has twice as many solutions. Always verify candidates against original (unsquared) equation.

  • Ignore ambiguous case (SSA): Solving triangle with two sides and non-included angle? Law of sines can produce 0, 1, or 2 valid triangles. Fail check for second solution misses valid answers.

  • Mix angle units: Using sin(30) when calculator or language in radian mode gives sin(30 radians), not sin(30 degrees). State unit convention at start, enforce throughout.

  • Wrong quadrant for reference angle: sin(x) = -1/2 yields x in Q3 and Q4, not Q1 and Q2. Always check sign of trig function against quadrant before placing angle.

  • Forget periodicity: Trigonometric equations on real line have infinite many solutions. Problem asks for general solution? Include "+ 2kpi" (or "+ kpi" for tangent) term. Asks for solutions in [0, 2pi)? Enumerate all solutions in that interval.

See Also

  • construct-geometric-figure - constructions often need trigonometric analysis to determine angles and lengths
  • prove-geometric-theorem - trigonometric identities frequent appear as lemmas within geometric proofs
  • create-skill - follow when packaging new trigonometric method as reusable skill

Dépôt GitHub

pjt222/agent-almanac
Chemin: i18n/caveman/skills/solve-trigonometric-problem
0
agentsagentskillsai-assisted-developmentclaude-codeskillsteams

Compétences associées

executing-plans

Design

Utilisez la compétence executing-plans lorsque vous disposez d'un plan de mise en œuvre complet à exécuter par lots contrôlés avec des points de contrôle de revue. Elle charge et examine le plan de manière critique, puis exécute les tâches par petits lots (3 tâches par défaut) tout en rapportant la progression entre chaque lot pour une revue par l'architecte. Cela garantit une mise en œuvre systématique avec des points de contrôle de qualité intégrés.

Voir la compétence

requesting-code-review

Design

Cette compétence délègue un sous-agent réviseur de code pour analyser les modifications apportées au code par rapport aux exigences avant de poursuivre. Elle doit être utilisée après avoir terminé des tâches, implémenté des fonctionnalités majeures, ou avant une fusion vers la branche principale. La revue aide à détecter précocement les problèmes en comparant l'implémentation actuelle avec le plan initial.

Voir la compétence

connect-mcp-server

Design

Cette compétence fournit un guide complet permettant aux développeurs de connecter des serveurs MCP à Claude Code via les transports HTTP, stdio ou SSE. Elle couvre l'installation, la configuration, l'authentification et la sécurité pour intégrer des services externes tels que GitHub, Notion et des API personnalisées. Utilisez-la lors de la configuration d'intégrations MCP, de la configuration d'outils externes ou du travail avec le Protocole de Contexte de Modèle de Claude.

Voir la compétence

web-cli-teleport

Design

Cette compétence aide les développeurs à choisir entre les interfaces Web et CLI de Claude Code en fonction de l'analyse des tâches, puis permet une téléportation transparente des sessions entre ces environnements. Elle optimise le flux de travail en gérant l'état et le contexte de la session lors du passage entre le web, la CLI ou le mobile. Utilisez-la pour des projets complexes nécessitant différents outils à diverses étapes.

Voir la compétence