The answer depends on the formula for what! The surface area, the volume, the number of edges, the total lengths of edges, etc. Since you have not bothered to share that crucial bit of information, I cannot provide a more useful answer.
Right angles
Although there is a separate formula for it, yes, a cube is technically a rectangular prism, and you can use the rectangular prism's formula, because a rectangle is defined as a quadrilateral with four right angles, which a square is.
Well if you mean triangular pyramid and triangular prism then: A triangular pyramid is a geometric solid with a base that is a triangle and all other faces are triangles with a common vertex. A triangular prism is a geometric solid with two bases that are congruent (identical), parallel triangles and all other faces are parallelograms. It is referred to as a right triangular prism if the faces are rectangles.
LA=ph
The formula for the area of a right prism is: Total surface area = area of one square + area of four triangles which equals = length2 + 4 ( 1/2 * base * height) The volume of a right prism is equal to: V = 1/3 (length * breadth) * perpendicular height Note: In the formula for the volume the length * breadth refers to the base.
Volume = Base Area times height
use the formula. ti
It is p*h square units.
bxh b=base h=height
Area of the right section x Length of the lateral edge
The volume of a three-dimensional figure is the amount of space it encloses. The volume V of a triangular prism is the product of the area B of a base and the height h of the prism. (The bases are triangles. In a special case of a right triangular prism the bases are right triangles)
Type your answer hereThe surface area of a prism is square root of 3* a 2 /4 + 3*a*h where a is edge of equilateral triangle and h is height of prism