Of course not . . . if they were different, the "cylinder" would be a truncated cone.
a cylinder does have 2 bases A cylinder has two bases.
The bases of a cylinder are circles and both have circumferences Area of the base of cylinder and a circle is pi*radius2 Circumference of a cylinder and a circle is 2*pi*radius or diameter*pi
The volume of the cylinder will be different, depending on which of the two numbers is the diameter, and which the radius.
A right circular cylinder has two bases. If you consider these bases to be faces, then the is yes.
It depends what you know. The top of a cylinder is in the shape of a circle. So, to find the diameter of the cylinder (which is also the diameter of the circle), if you know the radius, just multiply it by two.
A cylinder
the sphere doesn't have a base because it's all round
cylinder
a cylinder
Cylinder and cone are different because:Cylinder doesn't have the sharp point at the end as cone has.Cylinder has two circular bases while cone only has one.
A solid figure that has 2 parallel bases that are congruent circles. A Cylinder is a solid figure described by the revolution of a rectangle about one of its sides which remains fixed. Two ends of a cylinder are the circles of same diameter. Examples include pipes, cans, and poles. cylinder? A Cylinder is a solid figure described by the revolution of a rectangle about one of its sides which remains fixed. Two ends of a cylinder are the circles of same diameter. Examples include pipes, cans, and poles.
External diameter minus internal diameter will get you the difference and then you have to divide by two to get the wall thickness. (as the difference in diameter accounts for both sides of the cylinder)