You find the area of the whole square first. Then you find the area of the circle inside of it And then subtract the area of the circle from the area of the square and then you get the shaded area of the square
The area of the square is 98 square cm. Assuming the shaded area is the remainder of the circle, its area is 55.9 square cm (approx).
A square with an area of 400 square units has a perimeter of 80 units.
The area of square is : 39.69
Using trigonometry and the sine rule the area of the regular 5 sided pentagon with a perimeter of 50cm works out as 172.048 square cm rounded to 3 decimal places.
Area is length times width. If the length and width are measured in feet, the area will be in square feet.
length x width= area ex if the length of the square was 10 and the width was 5, 10 x 5= 50units^2
the length of one side squared
base*perpendicular height = area in square units
the definition of rule in math is what step you need to answer a question. what should you do to answer a problem.....you have to follow the rule to able to answer a problem..for example :-to find the area of a circle. you have to follow the formula of the circle . which is A= radius square pi. if u follow the rule your answer will be correct.....
Divide attic square footage (width times length) by 300 - The "1 in 300" rule.
Formula for finding the surface area of a sphere = 4*pi*radius2 in square units. Formula for finding the volume of a sphere = 4/3*pi*radius3 in cubic units. Or did you mean the formula for finding the area of a square? in which case it is Length*Height in square units.
To get the area of a square, you square the length, ie area = LxL
"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 table, square feet 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 table in square miles or acres.
what it the area of a 5.4 square
If I understand correctly, you are specifying the length of the three sides. You can use Heron's rule to calculate the area from the three sides:Define s = (a + b + c) / 2 and then calculate the area "A" as: A = square root of [s(s-a)(s-b)(s-c)]
You find the area of the whole square first. Then you find the area of the circle inside of it And then subtract the area of the circle from the area of the square and then you get the shaded area of the square