The square of the number of tiles on each row or column.
Generally a Chess board has 64 squares.
This answer given above by one of our friends is true only incase of squares of same size. But as we consider all possible squares of different sizes, then it will be calcualted using the formula, 12+22+32+42+52+62+72+82
count the number of squares, then times by the area of each square A=1/2(base*height) can also be used
To find the area of the quilt, you would multiply the number of rows by the number of squares in each row, and then multiply that by the area of each square. So, the area would be calculated as 8 rows x 6 squares/row x (1 foot x 1 foot) = 48 square feet.
number of months multiplied by amount of deposits
all you do is find the area of the circle... if you mean find the squares area, find the area of the circle, and then the square's area and subtract the squares area to the circles area
60% To find out the percent of colored in squares, you divide 3 by 5. Therefore, 3 divided by 5 is 0.6 or 60% To find out the percent of squares not colored in, you divide 2 by 5 to get 0.4 or 40%.
thinking
you need to count the squares going up and across the board.then you mutiplay them together
With great difficulty! One way would be to overlay a grid of evenly spaced squares (of a known area) and count the number of squares, but this can hardly be called accurate!
count the top row of squares and multiply that by the number of squares in a coloumn ( which are going down )
In the classic puzzle with squares of differeing sizes within squares, the number is 40.Its a popular net puzzle.
no,we can divide the figure into squares,rectangles and triangles
I'm not sure about a equation, but if you were to count em' up, this is what you would get:There are 64 1x1 squares on a standard checkerboard.There are 204 total squares on an eight-by-eight checkerboard.64 1x1 squares,49 2x2 squares,36 3x3 squares,25 4x4 squares ,16 5x5 squares,9 6x6 squares ,4 7x7 squares,1 8x8 square,Hope this helps!Forthfriend.[EDIT]Also, if you just wanted to find the number of 1x1 squares you could do;length x width equals 'surface area' or (a x b=c ) count the squares on one side, (horozontal) this equals (a) now count the squares on the other side (vertical) this equals (b) now multiply them for a calculation of 'surface area' You can use this method to find surface area in measurements or by the count of an item.EDITnotice how they're all square numbers64=8x849=7x736=6x625=5x516=4x49=3x34=2x21=1x1Forever12
i think its impossible Here is a way: Construct a number of squares that are one unit in area. For example, if you want to know the area of a plot of land, construct squares that are one square foot each. Then put as many of those squares as possible onto your plot without any gaps or any overlapping. Count the number of squares that you were able to put.
The number of squares in an n-by-n square is 1^2 + 2^2 + 3^2 + ... + n^2 This sum is given by the formula n(n + 1)(2n + 1)/6 Jai
There are an infinite number of parallelograms. No formula is required.
N squared would be used to find the square root of a number or numbers. In order to find the number of three digit numbers such that the sum of the square results of any two digits are equal to the third digit the use of the formula (HOE)squared=Hsquared*10000+2HE*100+Esquared is needed.
Oh, dude, you're really asking me to count squares now? Okay, so in a 5x5 grid, there are 25 individual squares of various sizes. You've got your big squares, your medium squares, your tiny squares... it's a whole square party in there. So, like, 25 squares, man.