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We need standard measurements because it helps us to find the measurements of things.
For a set of measurements, the mean valueis the sum of all the measurement values divided by the number of measurements in the set.
you need length and width length multiply width = area length + length + width + width = perimeter
The lengths of the base and the side. You would multiply these to get the area and would double sum of the two to obtain the perimeter measurement.
Add all the measurements together than divide by the total number of measurements you added. For example, to average 5kg, 7kg, and 9kg, we add 5, 7 and 9 then divide by 3 (because you are adding three numbers together) to find the average of 7.
We need standard measurements because it helps us to find the measurements of things.
The measurements that you need to find the area of a square is Area = Length x Width.
For a set of measurements, the mean valueis the sum of all the measurement values divided by the number of measurements in the set.
no
you need length and width length multiply width = area length + length + width + width = perimeter
You look on the measurements, in a graduated cylinder can help!!
You would need to have volume measurements.
You can't. To find out a cubic capacity you need 3 measurements no just 2. Your question provides just 2 measurements.
I can find no "fd" in official measurements
Anthropometrics are the measurement of different parts of the human body - you can find data tables in a number of ergonomic text books including "Bodyspace - Anthropotmetry, Ergonomics and the Design of Work" by Pheasant and Haslegrave. However, you need to be careful with what you are using the measurements for - many anthropometric measurements come from a small sample group and there are different measurements for different ethinc groups.
Anthropometrics are the measurement of different parts of the human body - you can find data tables in a number of ergonomic text books including "Bodyspace - Anthropotmetry, Ergonomics and the Design of Work" by Pheasant and Haslegrave. However, you need to be careful with what you are using the measurements for - many anthropometric measurements come from a small sample group and there are different measurements for different ethinc groups.
The lengths of the base and the side. You would multiply these to get the area and would double sum of the two to obtain the perimeter measurement.