When asked by The Post whether the current state of the Knicks should be viewed as a glass half full or half empty, Reggie Miller took longer to answer than he needed to score eight consecutive points and beat the Knicks in Game 1 of the 1995 Eastern Conference finals at the Garden.

“I would say it’s half empty,” Miller finally summarized before the Knicks’ latest loss, a 110-94 blowout loss to the Nuggets in Denver on Tuesday night. “I wanted to go half full because of [Kristaps] Porzingis, but where do they go after this? Their coaching situation is in a state of flux. You have a superstar in [Carmelo Anthony] who is frustrated. Where do they want to go?”

NBA legends-turned-broadcasters Miller, Charles Barkley and Kenny Smith were in Manhattan on Tuesday for the CBS-Turner Media Day promoting the upcoming NCAA Tournament. But the uncertainty surrounding the Knicks (26-39) was a frequent topic of discussion. All three agreed the addition of Porzingis was a positive for the franchise, while the rest is a mess.

For starters, the Knicks’ implementation of the triangle offense has been a failure, with Miller suggesting team president Phil Jackson needs to adjust to a more suitable offense.

“What does Phil want to do?” Miller questioned. “What does [owner James] Dolan want to do going forward with this? How do we want to play?

“Are we going to continue with this triangle crap or are we going to play a traditional free-flowing style like the Warriors play?

“I love the triangle if I have Michael Jordan, Kobe Bryant, [Shaquille O’Neal] and Scottie Pippen. I’d play the triangle all day. But if I’ve got Carmelo and Porzingis, no, I do not like the triangle.”

Barkley said he is not a fan of Jackson’s offensive system either.

“It’s all about the players,” he said. “Without Kobe, and Shaq and Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen, the triangle is just a circle.”

Beyond the development of Porzingis, the Knicks have little to show for their season, having won just four of their previous 21 games.

It’s why Smith said he also sees the Knicks’ glass as half empty.

“To me great teams always have a style of play,” said Smith, a Queens native and two-time NBA champion with the Rockets. “When I think of the Knicks, do they play up-tempo? Some nights. Do they slow it down and run the triangle? Some nights. Are they defenders? Sometimes. To me, that dictates if your glass is half empty or half full. Right now, it’s empty because they don’t have a style of play.

“What a style of play does is it allows you to draft, trade and get free agents to come. For Golden State, this is the player I need: a guy who can spread the floor and shoot 3s but can also defend bigger than his position. Now I know what I’m looking for. But if I said that to New York, I don’t know if that guy fits in New York because there’s no style that’s been created.

“In San Antonio, I know I need a guy who has a high basketball IQ that understands he doesn’t need the basketball to be effective. Now I can pick a guy like that. In New York, I don’t know what I’m picking.”

Frustration over the Knicks’ season apparently got the best of Anthony recently when he got into it with a heckler and later apologized. That doesn’t surprise Miller.

“The guys that he came in with in his draft class are playing for championships or competing for championships,” Miller said. “When you’re on a banana boat with LeBron [James] and Dwyane Wade and those guys are showing their bling and you’re playing on the richest franchise in the NBA and you have resources where you thought you could recruit guys, but no one wants to come play for the Knicks, I think that’s all building up and it’s coming out.”