The length of the square is equal to its width, because in a square all sides are equal.
You measure the height, width, and length.
the height is the same as the length and width
Yes, a square prism's height, length, and width are equal.
You cannot. In general, width and height place no restriction on length.
Volume = Length x Width x Height. If the prism is square, then either Height = Width or Height = Length In the first case, Volume = Length x Width2 and so Width = sqrt(Volume/Length) and Height = Width. In the second case, Volume = Length2 x Width and so Width = Volume/Length2 and Height = Length.
Well, honey, a square is a two-dimensional shape, so it doesn't have height like a three-dimensional object would. It does have length and width, but height is a whole other ball game. So, technically, a square doesn't have height, but nice try!
If you only have square feet, you won't be able to find the height, unless you're mistaking height for length. Area in square feet of a quadrilateral is width times length. To find the length, divide the area by the width.
Volume of a square = length*width*height
Surface area = 2*(length*width + width+height + height*length) = 370.125 square units.
multiply the length by the width(a.k.a the length by the height).
No. It has NO length, NO width, NO height. Only a position.No. It has NO length, NO width, NO height. Only a position.No. It has NO length, NO width, NO height. Only a position.No. It has NO length, NO width, NO height. Only a position.
The width would be the height.