Yes, there is.
equally likely means as likely as the other side ex: 1 piece of candy on this side,1 piece of candy on that side
1 cent
1m = 100 cm 1 sq m = 1 m × 1 m = 100 cm × 100 cm = 10,000 cm² 10 cm × 10 cm = 100 cm² → 1 sq m ÷ 100 cm² 10,000 cm² ÷ 100 cm² = 100 → weight the piece of cloth that is 10 cm by 10 cm in grams and multiple it by 100 to find out how many grams a piece of the same cloth which is 1 m by 1 m (1 square metre in area) weighs. You then know its gsm.
1 Centimeter!
you should bew able to though we do not no the area of the box so the candy bar may need to be broken into piceses heres what i did to find your answer: 8*5*1=40 volume of the candy bar
The major axis of an M&M is .6 cm.
1 gram
70 CM
There is no piece of candy.
The piece of candy is at the plaza.
it depends on what kind of candy and how big it is
1 m = 100 cm 1 sq m = 1 m x 1 m = 100 cm x 100 cm = 10000 sq cm ⇒ 0.01 sq m = 0.01 x 10000 sq cm = 100 sq cm A C7 envelope (big enough to hold a piece of A7 paper, or A6 paper folded in half, or A5 folded in quarters) is 8.3 cm by 11.2 cm which has an area of 8.3 cm x 11.2 cm = 92.2 sq cm. It should be quite possible to write your name and address on a piece of paper with an area of 0.01 sq m = 100 sq cm, for example a piece of paper 10 cm by 10 cm. Now that I've written my name and address on a piece of paper 10 cm by 10 cm, what should I do with it?