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It depends on the shape. There are relatively straightforward formulae for a sphere, cylinder, cone, prism (including cuboid), pyramid. Less simple formulae for parallelepipeds, ellipsoids and perhaps complex ones for other simple shapes. And then you have seriously complex 3-d shapes (a lump of putty) for which there are virtually no direct formulae.
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Silly putty
The 3 dimensional version of a circle is a sphere - a round ball. You can make it out of putty or papier mache.
Amongst "regular" objects, a sphere, an ellipsoid, a paraboloid. A smooth but irregular lump of putty could qualify.
no it will sick to the gronud but u can fore miny shapes ^_^
Mold it, play with it all kinds of things
No, it does not harden! It is always playable, even if you forget it on your desktop. The only way to harden silly putty would be to expose it to extremely cold temperatures. For example, Silly Putty hardens when put into liquid Nitrogen. It will harden the putty, but it will regain its texture as soon as it warms up.
Silly bandz are bracelets in the shapes of animals, words, movie characters, objects, signs, and almost anything else you can think of. Silly putty is a gooey substance that can easily be morphed into almost anything, but does not harden.
You can find a polyhedron with any number greater than 4 of vertices or faces. However, a torus, ellipsoid, sphere, paraboloid, hyperboloid are all standard shapes with no vertices. Cylinders, too, have no vertices. And there are many completely random shapes - a lump of putty, for example, which will have no vertex.
Maybe mighty putty.
Putty is not clay.
Putty was invented to Secure the Networks.
plastic putty
You do not need to install PuTTY in Linux as there are built-in utilities that can do PuTTY's job (ssh, telnet)
Wall putty..
Putty Squad happened in 1994.