That's only true if the question is talking about a square.
Any other shape, and it's not even true.
Now that I told you that, I think you can explain the whole thing
on your own. If you can't, then you really need to go back and
make sure you understand what the 'perimeter' and 'area' of a
square mean.
For a square, the area is always 1/4 of the perimeter squared. Or one side squared.
the area of a rectangleis 100 square inches. The perimeter of the rectangle is 40 inches. A second rectangle has the same area but a different perimeter. Is the secind rectangle a square? Explain why or why not.
No, any shape with four sides and same perimeter will always be a square.
A square with an area of 400 square units has a perimeter of 80 units.
The area of a square is a function of the perimeter of the square.
Because the perimeter is a linear measurement, and area is measured by multiplying 2 linear measurements together.
If the area of a square is 12 the perimeter is: 13.86
If a square has an area of 151.29cm2 its perimeter is: 49.2 cm
The area of a square with perimeter 28cm is: 49 cm2
When the area of a square is 36cm2, its perimeter is: 24 cm
creat a flowchart that will compute for the area and perimeter of a square?
A square can't have a perimeter of 36 and an area of 45. If a square's perimeter is 36,then its area is 81. If a square's area is 45, then its perimeter is about 26.83 . (rounded)A figure whose perimeter is 36 and whose area is 45 is not a square. It's a rectanglethat measures (3 by 15).