9 feet, 4 inches
In general no. A regular hexagon has the same length on all sides. Also, there are other hexagons with the same length on all sides that are not regular.
A heptagon is a shape that has seven sides of equal length. The perimeter of a heptagon can be found by multiplying the length of one side by seven. * * * * * No! The perimeter is the sum of the lengths of the seven sides. There is absolutely no requirement for the seven sides to be of equal length!
If you have the length of each of the three sides of a triangle, you can find the perimeter of (the distance around) the triangle by adding the length of the sides. Their sum will be the perimeter of this geometric shape.
Do you mean perimeter?The sum of the lengths of the four sides of a square is the perimeterThe total length of the circumference of a circle is its perimeter
Find the perimeter of the triangle with sides of length x, 5x and 6-3x?
You can find the perimeter of any geometric shape knowing the length of one side if all sides are equal. For example: squares, hexagons, octagons and so on...
If you have the length of one of the sides, or the perimeter, use the length of one of the sides, and multiply it by the radius of the hexagon, divided by 2. Multiply this by 6 for the total area of a hexagon. s * r /2 * 6 = area_of_hexagon.
All hexagons have 6 sides.
Hexagons have six sides, not four. Any number of them can be of the same length.
no No. You need to know the length of a rectangle's sides in order to calculate the perimeter.
Okay. What do you want to know? No information can be drawn from that statement. No information can be given to you because you are too ambiguous. All sides congruent, by definition, makes the shape equilateral. But there is no guarantee that it is equiangular and therefore it isn't necessarily a regular polygon. Hexagons have six sides. If all sides are congruent then the perimeter is six times the length of one side and the length of one side is one-sixth the length of the perimeter. Aside from general size, an equilateral hexagon can come in only two unique types: concave and convex. For any given side-length/perimeter, there are only two possible equilateral hexagons. The area of an equiangular equilateral hexagon is 3/2*(length of one side)*(length of one side)*(square root of 3).
In general no. A regular hexagon has the same length on all sides. Also, there are other hexagons with the same length on all sides that are not regular.
Hint: a square's perimeter is the sum of the length of its four sides...
A heptagon is a shape that has seven sides of equal length. The perimeter of a heptagon can be found by multiplying the length of one side by seven. * * * * * No! The perimeter is the sum of the lengths of the seven sides. There is absolutely no requirement for the seven sides to be of equal length!
The perimeter is the sum of the three sides.
If you have the length of each of the three sides of a triangle, you can find the perimeter of (the distance around) the triangle by adding the length of the sides. Their sum will be the perimeter of this geometric shape.
Add together the length of its sides. The accumulated lengths of its sides is the perimeter.