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1 as squares have to have equal sides
All four sides of a square are equal in length, therefore: area = length of a side squared length of a side = √[area] length x 4 = perimeter If the area is in cm² the length will be in cm.
A squares sides are equal in length. The answer is 4*5"=20".
Pythagoras worked out that for any right angle triangle that its hypotenuse when squared is equal to the sum of its squared sides.
First divide the perimeter by 2 then subtract the diagonal from this. The number left with must equal two numbers that when squared and added together equals the diagonal when squared (Pythagoras' theorem) These numbers will then be the length and height of the rectangle.
1 as squares have to have equal sides
All four sides of a square are equal in length, therefore: area = length of a side squared length of a side = √[area] length x 4 = perimeter If the area is in cm² the length will be in cm.
A square that measures 4 per side. Perimeter = L + L + L + L = 4L = 4*4 = 16 Area = L * L = 4*4 = 16 Although technically they won't be equal since perimeter has units of length, while area has units of squared length.
Yes, because all squares have four equal sides.
A square of area 100 cm squared, has the dimensions 10 X 10(length X Width or four sides of length ten).The perimeter is equal to length of sides times number of sides.Perimeter:10 times 4=40cm
its 1:4. Perimeter = sum of length of all sides. squares have 4 equal sides.
152.1 ft squared 152.1 ft squared
Yes because squares are an essential feature of Pythagoras' theorem for a right angle triangle in which he states that the hypotenuse of a right angle triangle when squared is equal to the sum of its squared sides.
In a 90-degree angle of a triangle is the hypotenuse squared is equal to the sum of squares of other two sides.
Pythagoras worked out that for any right angle triangle that its hypotenuse when squared is equal to the sum of its squared sides.
A squares sides are equal in length. The answer is 4*5"=20".
First divide the perimeter by 2 then subtract the diagonal from this. The number left with must equal two numbers that when squared and added together equals the diagonal when squared (Pythagoras' theorem) These numbers will then be the length and height of the rectangle.