Stage 13 · First Steps in Geometry

13.4  Measuring and Computing with Segments

Compare, add, subtract, and split — the same moves you made with numbers, now with length.

Ages 11–14 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 2 of 5 in this lesson: 13.4.2 Copying a segment (compass & straightedge)

13.4.2 Copying a segment (compass & straightedge)

Suppose you want a second segment exactly as long as AB, but you're not allowed to read any ruler marks. The compass does it perfectly. Open the compass so its two points sit on A and B — now the compass is the length AB, frozen. Draw a fresh ray starting at a new point A′, put the compass point on A′, and swing an arc that crosses the ray. Call the crossing point B′. Because you never changed the opening, A′B′ = AB.

Span AB with the compass (dashed construction arc), then swing the same radius onto a fresh ray. The copy A′B′ wears the same single tick as AB — that tick is our way of writing "these two are equal."
A mark that means "equal"

A single hatch tick across two segments says they have the same length. A copied segment always earns the same tick as its original, because the compass opening never changed. We'll use this tick-mark language constantly in geometry.

eastmath.com · 13.4 Measuring and Computing with Segments · 13.4.2 Copying a segment (compass & straightedge)