21/2 people per can of paint.
If Mark used 2 blue cans and 5 yellow cans, the resulting shade of green paint would differ from using different proportions of blue and yellow. The specific shade depends on the exact colors and tones of the blue and yellow paints used. Generally, more yellow than blue will create a lighter, brighter green, while a higher ratio of blue would yield a darker, muted green. Therefore, the mixed shade will vary based on the quantities and the specific paints involved.
Depends on the height of the room, how many windows and doors, if you use a primer, if it is bare sheet rock and how many coats. You need to be more specific.
sixty-five 13/20 = 6.5/10 = 65/100 = 65%
A unit price.
The xyz corporation makes about 6,000,000 cans each year.
7.74(2x)-13b/2.387(16b)
There would be alittle bit left
To create a mixture of 20 cans using red and white paint, you can choose various ratios depending on your desired color outcome. For example, if you want an equal mix, you would use 10 cans of red paint and 10 cans of white paint. Alternatively, if you prefer a lighter shade, you might use 15 cans of white paint and 5 cans of red paint. Adjust the quantities based on the specific shade you are aiming for.
Cans or buckets that you keep paint in.
Cans of paint needed: 2200/400 = 5.5 therefore 6 cans are needed
40 I think...
10000000000000000000000
One more time - Daft Punk
no there metal
you will need 5 cans of paint.
no
Yes, Warhol did a series of Campbell's soup cans.