use a ruler a square can be 34cm
To find missing side lengths using a scale factor, first determine the ratio of the lengths of corresponding sides between two similar figures. If the scale factor is known, you can multiply or divide the known side length by this factor to find the missing side length. For example, if the scale factor from figure A to figure B is 2:1 and you know a side length in figure A, you can divide that length by 2 to find the corresponding side length in figure B. Conversely, if you're going from figure B to figure A, you would multiply by 2.
This is the formula for volume:l x h x w( length x height x width )
To find the scale factor of a dilation, compare the lengths of corresponding sides of the original figure and the dilated figure. The scale factor (k) can be calculated by dividing the length of a side in the dilated figure by the length of the corresponding side in the original figure: ( k = \frac{\text{length in dilated figure}}{\text{length in original figure}} ). If the dilation is centered at a point, ensure both figures are oriented similarly for accurate measurements.
You divide the length of a side of the first figure by the length of the line in the same relative position in the second figure.
It matters on what figure it is.
To find the area of a quadrilateral, multiply the length and width of the figure. The product will give you the area of the figure.
my idea is that to find the area of a 2 dimensional figure you have to multiply length *width which equal the area except a triangle and some other figure
An equilateral has all of it's sides as the same length. You would need to know one side length to figure them all out.
64
Length x Width ( L x W )
To find the scale factor of a figure to a similar figure, you can compare corresponding linear dimensions, such as side lengths or heights. Divide the length of a side of the original figure by the length of the corresponding side of the similar figure. The resulting value is the scale factor, which indicates how much larger or smaller one figure is compared to the other. Ensure that both figures are oriented similarly for an accurate comparison.
Measure the length of a side in the first figure = L1. Measure the length of the corresponding side in the second figure = L2. Then, provided L1 and L2 are in the same units, the relevant ratio is L1/L2.