Yes - for calculating the area of any triangle - you either halve the base and multiply by the height - or - as you said half the height times the base. either way will work.
Calculate the area of the 2 triangles first, which is base multiplied by height, then divided by 2. Then find the area of the 3 rectangles, which is length multiplied by width. Finally, just add all the areas together, and there you go! You get the surface area! :D <3
The formula for finding the area of a triangle is base multiplied by height divided by two(B*H/2)Made by: Christine Ayoh
Half of the base times height.
half of the base multipled by the height
I find the area by applying the standard formula for the area of a triangle, which is the length of the base multiplied by the height all divided by two. You should too.
Calculate the area of the 2 triangles first, which is base multiplied by height, then divided by 2. Then find the area of the 3 rectangles, which is length multiplied by width. Finally, just add all the areas together, and there you go! You get the surface area! :D <3
A triangular prism can be thought of as a stack of triangles. Then the volume is equal to the area of the triangular base multiplied by the height of the prism, or 1/2 length * width * height.
Any triangles where the base multiplied by the height equal 2, so technically, infinity.
The formula I think is this: l x w x h /2l=lengthw=widthh=height/ =Divided byx =multiplied by2= 2
pi multiplied by r squared multiplied by height
The formula for finding the area of a triangle is base multiplied by height divided by two(B*H/2)Made by: Christine Ayoh
A=1/2 base x height
Half of the base times height.
half of the base multipled by the height
It is the length of the base multiplied by the height.
I find the area by applying the standard formula for the area of a triangle, which is the length of the base multiplied by the height all divided by two. You should too.
The area of a rectangle is its height multiplied by its width