The answers depend on what measures are available for the rectangles (sides, diagonals), for the triangle (3 sides, 2 sides and included angle, one side and 2 angles), and for the circle (radius, perimeter). In each case the formula to be used will be different.
Right triangle square rectangles
No; triangle = 180, circle = 360.
It depends on how the triangle and the circle are related - information that was not provided in the question.
Model each floor of the house with one or more rectangles, compute the area of each of these rectangles, and sum them to the total square footage. If the shape of you house if really complicated you may have to throw a triangle in there, but most houses can be approximated well enough using rectangles.
nope a portion of a circles area is a triangle
That will depend on their dimensions which have not been given.
Right triangle square rectangles
No; triangle = 180, circle = 360.
It depends on how the triangle and the circle are related - information that was not provided in the question.
An L-shaped area can be divided into two rectangles. The total area is the sum of the areas of the two rectangles.
Triangle-least area, circle- most area, per given perimeter . The circle would have an area of 154 square cm. the triangle could have an area of almost zero if it were a long, skinny triangle. An equilateral triangle would have an area approx 92.8 sq cm.
Model each floor of the house with one or more rectangles, compute the area of each of these rectangles, and sum them to the total square footage. If the shape of you house if really complicated you may have to throw a triangle in there, but most houses can be approximated well enough using rectangles.
Rectangle: LxW Triangle:? Circle:?
The area of a circle is equal to that of a triangle whose base has the length of the circle's circumference (distance around the circle) and whose height equals the circle's radius which comes to Pi multiplied by the radius squared. Area of Triangle 1/2 *base*height
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nope a portion of a circles area is a triangle
depends on the shape, if its a square the formula is LW, a rectangle is the same. For a triangle the formula is Lx1/2W. for a trapezium split it into triangles and rectangles and work out the areas before adding them together. for a circle i think its pixrsquared