Typically, when a mathematical problem wants you to find the value of a shaded area, it wants you to calculate the area. If the shaded area is a circle, the area can be found by multiplying pi by the square of the radius. If the shape is a triangle, the area is base times height, divided by 2. If the shape is a square or rectangle, the area is length times width.
To find the area of the shaded part in a rectangle, you first find the total area of the rectangle by multiplying its length by its width. Then, you subtract the area of the non-shaded part from the total area to get the area of the shaded part. The formula would be: Area of shaded part = Total area of rectangle - Area of non-shaded part
The area of the shaded region can be gotten by multiplying the area of the circle by the subtended angle of the sector.
What do you call shaded part?
The area is 0 square units since no shaded area is visible.
You cannot have a shaded area of 4 cm since area cannot be measured in centimetres.
The answer depends on what part of the figure is shaded!
Well, honey, the area of a shaded region is simply the difference between the total area and the area of the unshaded parts. Just calculate the area of the entire shape and subtract the areas of any parts that aren't shaded. It's basic math, darling, nothing to lose sleep over.
Either directly or by finding the area of the whole and subtracting the area of the non-shaded part.
shaded area is of special intest
0.0 since there is NO shaded area.
0. There is no circle so no shaded area of a circle!
The shaded area has no particular meaning.