It depends on what numbers are squared. The length, width and height MUST be linear measures: they cannot be given in square units.
You could have been given the areas of the faces, in which case there is a simple but different method to calculate the volume.
Volume of a cuboid = cross-section area times its length
The vol
Volume = Length * Width * Height
No, that will not give you the volume of a prism (since it's a triangular shape, not cuboid). For volume of a prism, you need to find the area of one of the end triangles, then multiply by the length of the prism.
Measure it!
Find the volume of a cuboid of length 7cm breath 5cm and height 6cm
width = volume/(length*height)
The answer depends on what information you have.If you know the length, breadth and height of the cuboid, the volume is L*B*H cubic units.
The answer depends on what information you have.If you know the length, breadth and height of the cuboid, the volume is L*B*H cubic units.
Volume =Length×Width×Height Substitute the given dimensions: Volume = 5×2×1=10 So, the volume of the cuboid is 10 cubic units.
With great difficulty because more information about the dimensions of the cuboid are required.
Volume of cylinder: base squared times length