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Square root the area and then times the answer by 4
A square has all 4 of its perimeter lengths equal. Thus the length of the perimeter divided by 4 will give you the 'unitary' dimension. Multiply this 'unitary' dimension by itself (square it) and the result is the area of the square in question.
divide the perimeter by four to get the length of one side then square your answer to find the area
You square-root the area
you divide the area by four and now you can find the perimeter
Square root the area and then times the answer by 4
A square has all 4 of its perimeter lengths equal. Thus the length of the perimeter divided by 4 will give you the 'unitary' dimension. Multiply this 'unitary' dimension by itself (square it) and the result is the area of the square in question.
Divide the perimeter by 4 and then square the result to find the area of the square.
creat a flowchart that will compute for the area and perimeter of a square?
Are you serious ? For a square: Perimeter = 4 times sqrt(area)
divide the perimeter by four to get the length of one side then square your answer to find the area
You square-root the area
you divide the area by four and now you can find the perimeter
-- The perimeter of the square is [4 times the length of one side] . -- The length of one side of the square is [square root of its area] .
If it's a square, the perimeter is 24.
To find the perimeter, you would first find the square root of 7 (because it is a square). This will give you about 2.645751311... Then you would multiply this by 4 (4 sides). The answer would then be 10.58300524... or 10.583 rounded to the nearest thousandth.
A square with a perimeter of 40 inches has sides 10 inches long which will give it an area of 100 inches2