the defnition of find the surface area of triangular prism and cylinder
To find the surface area of an equilateral triangular prism you take the area of the rectangular sides and the triangular bases and add them up and your done.
a triangular prism is different from a rectangular prism because: their names are different a triangular prism has a triangle for its' base a rectangular prism has a rectangle base a triangular prism has less sides than a rectangular prism a rectangular prism has more sides than a triangular prism
The volume of any prism is worked out in the same way whether it's a hexagonal prism, circular prism or a triangular prism. You just need to times the length of the prism against the area of the cross-section.
The answer depends on what measurements you do have.
There is no way to find perimeter from a 3D figure. However, you can find the perimeter of a side of a triangular prism by using perimeter formulas for a parallelogram or triangle.
You look at the edge of the triangular prism and count the points
Length of prism * perimeter of triangular face.
2*area of triangular faces + perimeter of triangle*length of prism (not prisim).
The lateral area [L] of a right prism with base perimeter [P] and height [h] is L=Ph.
The lateral area [L] of a right prism with base perimeter [P] and height [h] is L=Ph.
2*area of triangular base + perimeter of triangle*length of prism.
You look at the edge of the triangular prism and count the points
the defnition of find the surface area of triangular prism and cylinder
You find the area of each of the four triangular faces of the prism and add them together.
When you say surface of a prism this means the total amount of space on the outside of the prism. You have specified it to be a triangular prism, but taking the surface area of all prisms is the same process for all prisms. When finding the surface area of a prism you always use this equation... S.A. = (2 x Area of Prism Base) + (Height x Perimeter of Prism Base) In a triangular prism the base would be a triangle. Therefore to find the area you have to do 0.5 x base of the triangle x height of the triangle. For the perimeter of the triangle just add the length of all the sides together. The height indicated in your S.A. = ... formula... is how tall the prism actually stands. So since this prism is a triangular prism take the general surface area equation and put the correct triangular measurements into the general equation and you have this... S.A. = [2 x 0.5 x (height) x (base)] + [Height x perimeter] Here is the formula in word form. The surface area of a triangular prism is equal to two multiplied by one half multiplied by the height of the traingular height multiplied by the triangular base compute this number and then add it to the product of the height of the prism times the perimeter of the triangular base.
width*height*length=perimeter of a rectangular prism! :)