The perimeter of a polygon is not generally equal to the number of square units contained in its interior, which is the definition of the area of the polygon, not of its perimeter. By coincidence, the area and perimeter of a square four units on each side have the same magnitude, 16, but the perimeter is 16 units and the area is 16 square units .
The perimeter of a polygon is the sum of the length of each of its sides. If the polygon is a regular polygon the you can calculate the perimeter as [number of sides] *[the length of one side]
If its a regular polygon then 180-interior angle and divide the answer into 360 which will give the number of sides of the polygon.
(number of sides-2)*180 = sum of interior angles of a polygon
If it is a regular polygon and each interior angle is 176 degrees then it will have 90 sides.
It will have 34 sides
area
area
true
area
The number of square units contained in the interior
The angles of a polygon are not directly related to the measurement of the perimeter. If you measure a perimeter of a pentagon in inches and then again in centimetres, the measurement number will change but the pentagon will remain the same.
Yes
The perimeter of a polygon is the sum of the length of each of its sides. If the polygon is a regular polygon the you can calculate the perimeter as [number of sides] *[the length of one side]
If its a regular polygon then 180-interior angle and divide the answer into 360 which will give the number of sides of the polygon.
The answer depends on the number of sides in the polygon. Assuming all the sides are equal, the formua for the perimeter would be 5cm x number of sides.
It is used in the formula for finding the sum of the interior angles of a polygon:- (n-2)*180 = sum of interior angles whereas 'n' is the number of sides of the polygon
(number of sides-2)*180 = sum of interior angles of a polygon