If triangle is 3, cube is 4square is 4 and pentagon is 5, what is circle?
The question is counting the number of corners obviously. Triangle has 3 corners, cube square has 4 corners and pentagon has 5 corners.
The circle however has no corner so the answer is 0
Answer: 0
PS: For those that chose 360 and 2π (just 360 degrees in radians)! If 360 or 2π is to be the answer (the total angle in a circle), then triangle should be 180, cube square 360 and pentagon 540.
If triangle is 3, cube is 4square is 4 and pentagon is 5, what is circle?
The question is counting the number of corners obviously. Triangle has 3 corners, cube square has 4 corners and pentagon has 5 corners.
The circle however has no corner so the answer is 0
Answer: 0
PS: For those that chose 360 and 2π (just 360 degrees in radians)! If 360 or 2π is to be the answer (the total angle in a circle), then triangle should be 180, cube square 360 and pentagon 540.
BY Riddles Repository - Answers
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Telegram auto-delete message, expiring invites, and more
elegram is updating its messaging app with options for auto-deleting messages, expiring invite links, and new unlimited groups, the company shared in a blog post. Much like Signal, Telegram received a burst of new users in the confusion over WhatsApp’s privacy policy and now the company is adopting features that were already part of its competitors’ apps, features which offer more security and privacy. Auto-deleting messages were already possible in Telegram’s encrypted Secret Chats, but this new update for iOS and Android adds the option to make messages disappear in any kind of chat. Auto-delete can be enabled inside of chats, and set to delete either 24 hours or seven days after messages are sent. Auto-delete won’t remove every message though; if a message was sent before the feature was turned on, it’ll stick around. Telegram’s competitors have had similar features: WhatsApp introduced a feature in 2020 and Signal has had disappearing messages since at least 2016.
Mr. Durov launched Telegram in late 2013 with his brother, Nikolai, just months before he was pushed out of VK, the Russian social-media platform he founded. Mr. Durov pitched his new app—funded with the proceeds from the VK sale—less as a business than as a way for people to send messages while avoiding government surveillance and censorship.