The area is not sufficient information to determine the length and width. First of all, there is no reason to suppose that the area is rectangular as opposed to circular or triangular or some other simple or complicated shape. Even if you assume that it is a rectangle, there are infinitely many possible answers: ranging from nearly square areas to extremely long very thin strips.If the shape is a circle you can use the area, A, to calculate the radius, r, and the to find the perimeter, P.r = sqrt(A/pi) and then P = 2*pi*rIf the shape is a regular polygon with a given number of sides, n, the area, A, can be used to find the length of each side, L, and that length, multiplied by the number of sides gives the perimeter, P.L = sqrt[4*A*tan(pi/n)/n] and then P = n*LThis is the tan function for angles measured in radians. If working in degrees, you need tan(180/n)
To find the perimeter you add and to find the area we multiply.
Not easily. You need to find the area or perimeter of the components and sum them.
find the perimeter and area of a rectangle that is 15cm long and 5cm wide
you divide the area by four and now you can find the perimeter
Perimeter = 2*Area/Apothem.
creat a flowchart that will compute for the area and perimeter of a square?
Perimeter = 4*Side so that Side = Perimeter/4 Area of a rhombus = Side * Altitude so Altitude = Area/Side = Area/(Perimeter/4) = 4*Area/Perimeter
to find the perimeter you must add all sides. and to find area you have to multiply lenght and width
how to find the perimeter of a right angled triangle using the area
In general you cannot find the perimeter of any shape if only the area is given.
There is no relationship between the perimeter and area of a rectangle. Knowing the perimeter, it's not possible to find the area. If you pick a number for the perimeter, there are an infinite number of rectangles with different areas that all have that perimeter. Knowing the area, it's not possible to find the perimeter. If you pick a number for the area, there are an infinite number of rectangles with different perimeters that all have that area.
Are you serious ? For a square: Perimeter = 4 times sqrt(area)