Technically, there are an infinite number of ways to do it.
Probably the easiest way is to draw a rectangle that's 1mm wide and 23mm long.
When you finish doing that, you might feel like you've accomplished something important.
But you haven't. The plain truth is that nobody needs a picture of a shape with an area
of 23 mm2. The reason you were assigned to draw it was because that's a fine way for you
to learn how the dimensions of a shape and the area of the shape all work together. But
you went and got somebody to do everything for you except the ruler and pencil part,
so all you have is this drawing of a long skinny rectangle, and you still haven't learned
anything about the math part. That's too bad.
That's going to depend on the shape of the shape.
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.
square circle rectangle diamond
There are an infinite number of them. Any shape that you can draw or define or describe or imagine can be made with an area of 36.
how do you draw a trapezoid two ways
A rectangle with sides of 3 and 4 units will meet the requirements.
You cannot draw a 3d shape. What you can draw, though, is a two dimensional projection of a 3 dimensional shape.
draw a shape with ten sides
You draw patterns by taking two or more thing and drawing them in a certain order. Example: :)...;)...:0...:)...;)...:0
First draw a oval shape and then underneath the oval draw a small tablet shape and the legs and arms and the face
Draw filing will result in a higher quality finish, as the grain will be parallel to the edge of the work (therefore the surface area of the egde will be less, ie: smoother)
A centimetre squared is a measure of area; it can have any shape. The easiest area of 1 centimetre squared (to draw/visualise) is a square with one centimetre on each side.