Class VII Mathematics

Chapter 14: Symmetry & Visualising Solid Shapes

Standard NCERT & CBSE aligned study curriculum. Master concepts, track accuracy, revise weak areas, and challenge yourself with 9 customized practice modes.

Chapter Overview

Welcome to Class VII Mathematics: Symmetry & Visualising Solid Shapes. This chapter forms a core structural component of the math syllabus, designed to build analytical rigor and key formula models.

Use the detailed subtopic guide below to review standard definitions, key mathematical rules, and study guidelines.

Prerequisite Concepts

Does it Look the SameBoxes and Sketches

Detailed Subtopics Study Guide

Review detailed conceptual explanations, mathematical equations, and guidelines for each subtopic in this chapter:

1Rotational symmetry order and angle

Concept Explanation

The order of rotational symmetry is the number of times a shape looks identical to its starting position during a 360° turn. The angle of rotation is the minimum angle needed.

Mathematical Representation
\text{Angle} = \frac{360^\circ}{\text{Order}}
Study Guideline: A regular hexagon has rotational symmetry of order 6 and an angle of 60°.

2Visualising solid shapes: 2D representations of 3D

Concept Explanation

Drawing 3D shapes on flat 2D surfaces using nets, cross-sections, or slanted projection drawings.

Mathematical Representation
\text{3D Solid} \rightarrow \text{2D flat nets}
Study Guideline: Study how faces fold and join to visualize 3D space from 2D sheets.

3Oblique sketches and Isometric drawings

Concept Explanation

Oblique sketches use slanted lines for depth and do not preserve true proportions. Isometric drawings are drawn on dot grid paper at 30° angles, preserving relative measurements.

Mathematical Representation
\text{Oblique: slanted}; \quad \text{Isometric: true proportions on 30° grid}
Study Guideline: Use isometric dot paper to sketch 3D figures with proportional edge lengths.

4Slicing visual sections

Concept Explanation

Slicing is intersecting a 3D solid with a flat plane to observe the resulting 2D cross-section shape.

Mathematical Representation
\text{Slice}(S, P) = \text{2D cross-section}
Study Guideline: Slicing a sphere in any direction always produces a circular cross-section.

5Shadow play projections

Concept Explanation

Observing the 2D shapes of shadows cast by 3D objects under a light source.

Mathematical Representation
3D Solid \xrightarrow{\text{Light shadow}} 2D projection
Study Guideline: A cylinder can cast a circular shadow (when light shines on its base) or a rectangular shadow (when light shines on its side).