A line has infinite length, no width, no thickness, and no endpoints.
A point has no length, width, or thickness. A line has infinite length but no width or thickness. A plane has infinite length and width but no thickness.
Time has no length, width or thickness.
Length
Length times width times thickness
Yes, if the three points are infinite.
This would be a line, which has no width, no thickness and no endpoints, but has infinite length.
It is the parallel lines in Geometry!
No that would be a line
A point has no length, width, or thickness. A line has infinite length but no width or thickness. A plane has infinite length and width but no thickness.
thought
It's a 'line'.
A plane
A line fits this description.
Time has no length, width or thickness.
A point.
If the bar is a three dimensional object it will have some thickness. Then, assuming it is oblong in shape and knowing its length, width and thickness: Surface_area = 2 x (length x width + width x thickness + thickness x length)
The capacity of any book is infinite. If it can get a mind thinking, there is no limit to where that mind can go.If you are referring to the more mundane definition - of volume, then the answer is length x width x thickness in appropriate cubic units.The capacity of any book is infinite. If it can get a mind thinking, there is no limit to where that mind can go.If you are referring to the more mundane definition - of volume, then the answer is length x width x thickness in appropriate cubic units.The capacity of any book is infinite. If it can get a mind thinking, there is no limit to where that mind can go.If you are referring to the more mundane definition - of volume, then the answer is length x width x thickness in appropriate cubic units.The capacity of any book is infinite. If it can get a mind thinking, there is no limit to where that mind can go.If you are referring to the more mundane definition - of volume, then the answer is length x width x thickness in appropriate cubic units.