Perimeter: Add up the length of all the sides. Area: You have to learn formulae for different figures, and apply them. For a rectangle, you just multiply length x side. For other figures, use other formulae. For example, the area of a triangle is 1/2 x base x height (where the height is perpendicular to the base).
math of course
Perimeter = 4 times the square root of the area.
Area: 1/2πr2 Perimeter: 1/2πd+d
We learned about area and perimeter in math class.
Perimeter: add all sides area: multiply length times width for rectangles
math of course
The perimeter of a triangle does not provide sufficient information to calculate its area.
Perimeter = 4 times the square root of the area.
What you have to do is to Squarerootthe Perimeter then multiply the answer by 4For example if the area is 256 , and Perimeter is ?solution=Perimeter is 64Answered by Faustin,Obedi
area and perimeter.
Area: 1/2πr2 Perimeter: 1/2πd+d
No, you can not calculate an area if you know just the perimeter. For example, rectangle with sides of 10 and 20 would have a perimeter of 60 and an area of 200, but a square of sides 15 would have a perimeter of 60 and an area of 225. You need to know more details about the shape than just the perimeter.
Create a closed polyline form the points and use the AREA command to calculate the area and perimeter.
You get the largest area with a circle. Divide the perimeter by (2 x pi), then calculate the area with the formula pi x radius2.You get the largest area with a circle. Divide the perimeter by (2 x pi), then calculate the area with the formula pi x radius2.You get the largest area with a circle. Divide the perimeter by (2 x pi), then calculate the area with the formula pi x radius2.You get the largest area with a circle. Divide the perimeter by (2 x pi), then calculate the area with the formula pi x radius2.
We learned about area and perimeter in math class.
the p/a ratio is the sum of the perimeter divided by the area therefore if perimeter is 20m and the area 25m2 the sum is 20/25=0.8
Perimeter: add all sides area: multiply length times width for rectangles