length *width*height=area of cuboid
With great difficulty since such a shape cannot exist. A cuboid, by definition, has six faces (sides).
To find the volume of a cuboid, you need its length, width, and height. If you have the area of the base (length × width) and the length, you can rearrange the area formula to find the width: width = area/length. Once you have the width, you can multiply the area by the height (if known) or find the height similarly to calculate the volume using the formula: Volume = length × width × height.
you do length times width like 4 time 6 = ...
add da numbers enig
To find the length of a cuboid without knowing its volume, you can use the dimensions of the cuboid if they are available. A cuboid is defined by its length, width, and height. If you have the measurements of the width and height, you can express the length in terms of those dimensions if you have additional relationships or constraints (such as surface area). Otherwise, you would need at least one dimension or another property of the cuboid to determine the length.
Volume of a cuboid = cross-section area times its length
With great difficulty because more information about the dimensions of the cuboid are required.
A cuboid is a hexahedron. That is a solid face with six faces. More specifically, all six faces of a cuboid are rectangular. The total surface area of a cuboid with sides of length A, B and C is 2*(AB + BC + CA) sq units.
derivation of surface area of cuboid
With great difficulty since such a shape cannot exist. A cuboid, by definition, has six faces (sides).
A cuboid is a 3 dimensional object and 3 measures are required for the total surface area of a cuboid.
The surface area of a box, which is a cuboid, depends on its length, width and height. A cube is a special type of cuboid in which the length , width and height are all the same.
you do length times width like 4 time 6 = ...
add da numbers enig
To find the length of a cuboid without knowing its volume, you can use the dimensions of the cuboid if they are available. A cuboid is defined by its length, width, and height. If you have the measurements of the width and height, you can express the length in terms of those dimensions if you have additional relationships or constraints (such as surface area). Otherwise, you would need at least one dimension or another property of the cuboid to determine the length.
The answer depends on what information is provided: the volume, total surface area, principal diagonal, minor diagonal, etc.
Lateral surface area of a cuboid = 2 (Length + Breadth) × Height Lateral surface area of a cube = 4 × Side2