"Best" is a subjective criterion when it comes to which units of measurement to use. It would vary from country to countryand depend on why you need to know the area. In general, for a wall, square feet, square yards or square meters might make the most sense, but I wouldn't rule out square centimeters or square inches. It would be ridiculous to measure the wall in square miles or acres.
The basic air conditioning units are either wall, window, portable or central units. Window units are placed in the window, wall units are installed in the wall, portable ones are usually powered with electricity and can be moved wherever needed. Central air conditioning units can cool an entire house instead of just one small area.
area
length X width area LXW=A
To do this you would need to know the area of a brick and the area of the wall. Then you divide the area of the wall by the area of a brick. There are approximately 60 bricks per square metre.
you need to find the area
Width = 22m Height = 3.5m --- Convert both of these into cm to convert into same units Width = 22 x 100 = 2200cm Height = 3.5 x 100 = 350cm Next find the area of the wall ---Area of rectangle = height x width Area of the wall = 2200 x 350 = 770,000 sq. cm Now for the bricks Length = 22cm Width = 7cm Area = 22 x 7 = 154 sq.cm To find the number of bricks needed we have to divide the area of the wall with the area of one brick 770,000 / 154 =5000 Therefore 5000 bricks are needed to make a single wall
Yes you can. Get a studfinder to find where the 2X4's are. Make a small mark on the wall where the studs are located. You can put a nail or screw in the area or area(s) where the stud is at. (The area you marked on the wall)
Where in a cell wall would you find this organelle
Multiply the height by the width Area = length x width or (height x width in this case)
One can fix wall units to the wall by using the screws, bolts and other equipment provided with the unit when it was purchased. There will be directions with it as well.
The plural form of wall unit is wall units.