All shapes have areas that are in square units so there is nothing you need do there. So all you need is a closed shape with a perimeter of 7 units.
Pick a unit. Draw a square that has two of those units on each side.
YES From your start point draw a line 5 units up, from this point draw a line 5 units across, from this point draw a line 5 units down, from this point draw a line 5 units back to the start. You have drawn a square with a total perimeter length of 20 units and a area of 25 square units.
Perimeter is the length of all sides of a shape. So to draw a perimeter that comes to 9 just make sure that when you add up the length of all the sides of whatever shape you make that it adds up to 9 units.
Yes, because each of its 4 sides would measure 5 units in length.
Draw a rectangle with 2 sides 5 units long and 2 sides 4 units long
Pick a unit. Draw a square that has two of those units on each side.
Squares are rectangles. Draw a 2 unit square.
YES From your start point draw a line 5 units up, from this point draw a line 5 units across, from this point draw a line 5 units down, from this point draw a line 5 units back to the start. You have drawn a square with a total perimeter length of 20 units and a area of 25 square units.
The perimeter and area of a shape do not provide sufficient information. With a given perimeter, the largest area that you can enclose is a circle, but you can then flatten the circle to reduce its area. Similarly, in terms a of quadrilaterals, a square has the largest area, but it can be flexed into a rhombus whose area can be made as small as you like. All that can be said is that there is no shape with a perimeter of 12 units whose area is 12 square units.
the answer is jermil warren with a thing :)
Yes. Each side is five units long.
It depends on how long do you draw the shape example you can draw a 6cm square and you draw a 8cm square they are different . So it really depends on how the shape is measured.
You can draw any shape you want with a perimeter of 20. For a square, make each side 5. For a triangle, 62/3 , etc.
The rectangle is in fact a square with 4 equal sides of 5 units in length.
Yes, you can. If you make it 1 unit by 5 units
To draw a shape with the same area and perimeter, decide what shape you want to draw, then take the equations for area and perimeter and make them equal, and then solve what the various side lengths have to be. For instance, the area of a square is L2 where L is the side length, and the perimeter of a square is Lx4 We want them equal, so L2=Lx4 Dividing both sides by L gives us L=4, so if I draw a square with side length 4, it will have the same area and perimeter.
Yes. Make the length of each side 1/4 of the desired perimeter.