2cm*5cm*3cm=30cm3
The volume of the cuboid: 2*5*3 = 30 cubic cm
volume = length*height*width Rearrange the formula: length = volume/height*width
height*length*width = volume Divide both sides by length*width to find the height: height = volume divided by length*width
The formula for volume is length x width x height = volume. So if you take the volume and divide it by the length and width it should give you the height.
the formula for the volume of a cuboid is quite simple,it is length multiply by width multiply by height.That's all.
In the case of a rectangular cuboid, I would say that the volume is simply DEFINED to be length x width x height. The volume of other, more complicated shapes, can then be derived, based on this basic definition. But you do need to have a starting point, i.e., "How is volume even defined in the first place?"Just to show that this definition makes sense, think of a rectangular cuboid as having integer values for length, width, and height. In that case, you can divide it into unit cubes (cubes of side length 1), and it is easy to see (basically, by counting the unit cubes) that the number of unit cubes will be length x width x height - IN THIS SPECIAL CASE.
width = volume/(length*height)
Volume = Length * Width * Height
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Volume = Length * Height * Width That equation can be rearranged to: Width = Volume/(Length * Height) This answer will only work for a cuboid (or a cube) and not any other 3d shape.
volume of cuboid = height * width * length volume = 7 *1 * 2 =14 cm ^ 3
By dividing length times width into its given volume
14
For a cuboid it gives its volume.
The volume of a rectangular prism (a shape like box)
Length x width x height equals volume.* * * * *But only if the object in question is a cuboid (rectangular prism). Length*Width*Height for a sphere, for example, does not equal its volume.
Rectangles are flat or two dimensional. They have an area; they do not have a volume. The area of a rectangle is its length x width. If it was about the volume of a three dimensional Cuboid (or rectangular cuboid), its volume is the length x width x height.
Volume of a cuboid.