Diameter is a term used for circles, not rectangles. The diagonal is
sqrt(102 + 11.52) (by Pythagoras)
= sqrt(100 + 132.25) = sqrt(232.25) = 15.24 units approx.
A rectangle is an elongated square. It doesn't have a diameter; only circles have diameters.
10% of 115 = 10% * 115 = 0.1 * 115 = 11.5
Well, sweetie, a rectangle doesn't have a diameter because that's a term reserved for circles. If you want to find the dimensions of a rectangle, you measure the length and width, honey. Just grab a measuring tape and get to work, no need to overcomplicate things.
A rectangle does not have a diameter, as such, but the diagonal is similar enough. If the sides of a rectangle are x cm and y cm then, using Pythagoras's theorem, the diagonal is sqrt(x2 + y2) cm.
No. The diagonal of the rectangle is a little over 32.2, and nothing that long can fit into a circle with a diameter of 27.
Yes and the diameter of the circle will be the diagonal of the rectangle.
-115/10
115 + 10 = 125
A rectangle does not have a diameter but it has diagonals. So using Pythagoras' theorem each diagonal is about 351.141mm in length rounded to 3 decimal places.
Question: In figure, what is the ratio of the areas of a circle and a rectangle if the diagonal of rectangle is equal to diameter of circle.
10% off of 115 dollars = 90% of 115 dollars = 115*90/100 = 103.50 dollars
A rectangle does not have a diameter, only circles or similar obects have diameters. A rectangle has a diagonal which is obtained by joining two opposite corners. Any two adjacent sides of the rectangle together with the diagonal form a right angled triangle and so the length of the diagonal can be derived using Pythagoras's theorem.