Pick any length and any width you want for the rectangle. The choice
of its dimensions is completely up to you, just as long as the length and
width make 60 when you multiply them together.
Here are some whole-number pairs you could use for length and width:
In the formula for the rectangle, put the width equal to the length.
A rectangle is, by definition, a parallelogram with four equal angles, all of which equal 90 degrees. If you only know three angles in a rectangle, something is wrong. In order to find the area of a rectangle, you must know its height and length. The area is then found by multiplying these two values together.
find the width of a rectangle if its area is 9/28 of a square foot
The length of a rectangle is twice its width. If the perimeter of the rectangle is , find its area.
the length of a rectangle is 5 more then the width. Find the perimeter and the area of the rectangle
find the perimeter and area of a rectangle that is 15cm long and 5cm wide
in order to find area of rectangle=(len*bred)
In order to find the area of a rectangle, multiply the length by the width of the rectangle. For example: If the length of a rectangle is 5cm and the width of a rectangle is 2cm, then the area of the rectangle would be 5cm X 2cm = 10cm².
If the length and the breadth of the rectangle represent the two numbers, then the area of the rectangle is equal to their product. But, how do find the area? You multiply the two numbers. So this appears to be a long way to do something that is inherently straightforward!
in order to find the area of a rectangle you must multiply the base of the rectangle by its height. This is also the same for most polygons
Area of rectangle with part of the shape missing = area of rectangle (lengthxwidth)-area of missing part.
the area of a rectangle = length x widthwe can rearrange this to give uslength of a rectangle = area/ width