In some European countries a common form of set square combines a 90-45-45 triangle, a ruler and a protractor into a single tool made of stiff or slightly flexible transparent plastic. Being a mandatory tool used by pupils in
middle school and higher in German-speaking and neighbouring countries, this specific design is named "
Geodreieck" (short form of "", meaning "geometry triangle") or similar. It was originally developed in 1964 by the German manufacturer (after several refirmations now
Geotec Schul- und Bürowaren GmbH). Relatively uncommon in English-speaking countries, this is sometimes called a "protractor triangle", a term, however, also used for other similar designs. The original design has a hypotenuse length of 15.8 cm and features a 2×7 cm symmetry scale in
millimeter and
degree raster. Variants in larger sizes, with fixed or detachable handles, with or without bevelled edges (facets), and with or without ink nodules or embossed labels exist as well. Some variants have extra markings at angles of 7° and 42° (138° and 173°) in addition to the normal 45° and 90° markings to ease
dimetric axonometry per ISO 5456-3, others feature angle scales in
gons instead of degrees. Several other somewhat similar designs named "" ("TZ triangle") exist for (larger) technical drawings (TZ from German: ). The scale reaches from 10 to 10 cm, or even 11 to 11 cm. == Navigation protractor triangles ==