It depends.
If the piece of paper is 1 micron wide and 10 kilometres long, it will have an area of 0.01 sq metres but I would not be able to write anything on paper that narrow.
Or, worse, it could be 1 nanometre wide and 10,000 km long and still have an area of 0.01 sq metres!
Paper with large squares made up of 100 smaller squares to aid people draw the scales and plot their graphs easier.
no
Squares are easier to fold, but all origami are not squares. Some are rectangles, and even circles. The person that created this, probably thought squares were better too.
To draw a rectangle that's 20 by 15 meters on a A4 piece of paper you could add a scale perhaps for every 1 cm drawn on the paper would be 5 meters in reality. Doing this would allow you do simply draw a 4 by 3 cm rectangle. You could however change the scale suit yourself.
It varies a lot between brands.
Very easily.
a paper cup
Paper with large squares made up of 100 smaller squares to aid people draw the scales and plot their graphs easier.
no
It depends on the size of the sheet of paper
roll of toilet paper
cut out your paper squares. To make our box we'll need two square pieces of paper. ... Fold the paper squares in half. Fold your paper into a diamond. Make the paper creases. Turn your paper square into a rectangle. Create an L with your paper. Unfold the edges.Finish your box!
You get four rectangles
Fold it 10 times....
Squares are easier to fold, but all origami are not squares. Some are rectangles, and even circles. The person that created this, probably thought squares were better too.
To draw a rectangle that's 20 by 15 meters on a A4 piece of paper you could add a scale perhaps for every 1 cm drawn on the paper would be 5 meters in reality. Doing this would allow you do simply draw a 4 by 3 cm rectangle. You could however change the scale suit yourself.
500 squares of paper in a roll?