triangle inequality, in Euclidean geometry, theorem that the sum of any two sides of a triangle is greater than or equal to the third side; in symbols, a + b ≥ c. (In cases where a + b = c, a degenerate triangle is formed in which all three vertices lie on the same line.) In essence, the theorem states that the shortest distance between two points is a straight line.
The triangle inequality has counterparts for other metric spaces, or spaces that contain a means of measuring distances. Measures are called norms, which are typically indicated by enclosing an entity from the space in a pair of single or double vertical lines, | | or || ||. For example, real numbers a and b, with the absolute value as a norm, obey a version of the triangle inequality given by |a| + |b| ≥ |a + b|. A vector space given a norm, such as the Euclidean norm (the square root of the sum of the squares of the vector’s components), obeys a version of the triangle inequality for vectors x and y given by ||x|| + ||y|| ≥ ||x + y||. With appropriate norms, the triangle inequality holds for complex numbers, integrals, and other abstract spaces in functional analysis.