No, that will not give you the volume of a prism (since it's a triangular shape, not cuboid). For volume of a prism, you need to find the area of one of the end triangles, then multiply by the length of the prism.
-- Measure the length, width, and height of the prism. -- Multiply the three numbers. The result is the volume of the prism.
Find the area of one end of the prism, then multiply it by the length of the prism.
To find the volume of a triangular prism u have to find the length, width, and height of the prism and then u multiply all of it together
You multiply the length and width to get the volume
Multiply base area x height.
-- Measure the length, width, and height of the prism. -- Multiply the three numbers. The result is the volume of the prism.
To find the volume of a rectangular prism, multiply the base, width, and height. If the prism is irregularly shaped, multiply the base and the height.
Find the area of one end of the prism, then multiply it by the length of the prism.
To find the volume of a triangular prism u have to find the length, width, and height of the prism and then u multiply all of it together
you first need to find the length, width, and height. then you multiply all those numbers together, and you have your answer.
You multiply the length and width to get the volume
step 1 Find the length of the prism. Step 2 Find the width of the prism. Step 3 Find the height of the prism. Step 4 Multiply the 3 dimensions together. It does not matter the order in which you multiply the numbers. Step 5 Write your answer in the proper cubic unit of measurement.
Find the area of a triangular section, 1/2bh, and then multiply by the length of the prism.
Multiply them together.
Capacity generally implies volume in geometry. To calculate the volume of a triangular prism, find the area of one of its triangular bases and multiply it by the height of the shape.
To find the area of any rectangular prism, multiply each dimension.
Find the surface area of the top or bottom face and multiply that by the depth of the prism. For example, a triangular prism would have a volume of (1/2 * base * height) * (depth)