The formula of the rectangle is multiplying the length and the width to get the area. You can add all the four sides so as to find the perimeter of the rectangle.
If you mean as in a rectangular cuboid then divide the product of the two given sides into the volume to find the height.
Divide the rectangle in two triangles and then use the pythagorean theorem to find the remaining sides.
A rectangle is, by definition, a parallelogram with four equal angles, all of which equal 90 degrees. If you only know three angles in a rectangle, something is wrong. In order to find the area of a rectangle, you must know its height and length. The area is then found by multiplying these two values together.
By using the fact that opposite sides of a rectangle have the same length.By using the fact that opposite sides of a rectangle have the same length.By using the fact that opposite sides of a rectangle have the same length.By using the fact that opposite sides of a rectangle have the same length.
A rectangle is a type of parallelogram (a four sided figure with two pairs of opposite parallel sides). In fact, a rectangle is an equiangular parallelogram, meaning all the angles are congruent. Using the polygon interior angle theorem, you can use simple math to find that all four angles in a rectangle equal 90 degrees (right angles). Also, the opposite sides of a rectangle are congruent. A picture of a rectangle is included in the link below.
You can't - there is not enough information. The area also depends on the angles. For example, a rectangle of 6 x 4 has an area of 24 square units; if you change the angles, while keeping the sides, the area gets less, until - when two opposite angles are near zero, and the other two angles are near 180 degrees - the rectangle's area will be almost zero.
Unless you are given atleast 2 other angles, there is no way to find them out.
Type your answer here... The sum of the angles in all polygons is 360 degrees. Thus, if you know the measure of the interior angles you can divide 360 by the measurement to find out how many interior angles and sides there are.
A = LW divide by W to both sides A/W = L
They are all right.
No. If you only know angles, you can't find any sides.Millions of triangles can all have the same angles. In fact, an infinite number of them can.