There is no sure way to find the height of a rectangular prism with just the length and width. You need some other defined variable like the area. The height can range from 1 to infinity and never affect the base, length, and width.
You can't with just the length of one side for piece of information
Length x Width x Height Since length, width, and height in a cube are all the same, just take one side and cube it. X3
You cannot calculate the height of a triangle from just the length of two sides. You would either have to measure it or obtain additional information about the triangle.
you just take the length of it's midsegment and multiply it by its height to find area. to find it's perimeter, just add the measures of it's sides
To find out the volume of a rectangle is just multiply length x height x width
To get the surface area, someone had to multiply length times width. So what we would need to do is take our surface area, divide by our height, which is our width, and get our length. So if SA stood for surface area, and h stood for height, we'd take SA/h to get the length.
Multiply half of the length of the base by the height. Just like any other triangle.
If it is a "square" area then you won't be looking for volume. However, if you are looking for the volume of a rectangular prism, it is simply: Width * Length * Height = Volume This simplifies to Length ^ 3 if you are trying to find the volume of a cube. If you are looking for the volume a square area takes depending on it's height, you can just take the area and multiply it by the height as well. (Width * Length) = Area (Width * Length) * Height = Volume Therefore: Area * Height = Volume
length x breath x height is the answer for volume, so you just multiple them together.
Well, honey, to find the length, width, and height with the volume, you'll need to know the formula for the shape you're dealing with. For a rectangular prism, you can use the formula V = lwh, where V is the volume, l is the length, w is the width, and h is the height. Just plug in the volume and two of the dimensions, then solve for the third. Easy peasy lemon squeezy!
Knowing just the length of the base you can not work out the area. You need the height and the base or the length of the hypotenuse in order to work out the area.