If you know the length of one side - and the area... divide the area by the known side - to get the value of the unknown.
It it's a rectangle, then the length one side is 450/(length of the next side) .
A rectangle has a perimeter of 28 inches. The length of one pair of sides is 8 inches per side. What is the length of each of the other sides? Six in.
The length of the rectangle is 18cm. The width of the rectangle is 9cm.
Divide the area by the known side.
If you are trying to find the ratio of the lengths of two similar rectangles, divide the length of one side of one rectangle by the corresponding side length of the other rectangle. To find the ratio between their volumes, divide the volume of one rectangle by the volume the other rectangle. To find volume, multiply the width of the rectangle by the length of the rectangle.
You can find the perimeter of a rectangle if you know its area and the length of one side. Divide the area by the length of the known side and the quotient will be the length of a side perpendicular to the known side, and then multiply the sum of the two sides by two to find the perimeter.
If you know the length of one side - and the area... divide the area by the known side - to get the value of the unknown.
To find the area of a rectangle, you multiply the length by the width (one side by a different side) Or you could count how many centimeter squares make up the rectangle
If you are given two similar rectangles, one with all measurements and the other with only one, you first need to find the conversion ratio. Let's call the rectangle that you know everything about, rectangle A, and the other rectangle B. You take the ratio of the side of rectangle B to rectangle A. You then multiply the length of rectangle A by this value, to find the length of rectangle B.
-- Slice it down one side and flatten it out. -- Now you have a rectangle. You only have to find the area of a rectangle. -- The area of a rectangle is (length) times (width). -- The length of the rectangle used to be the length of the cylinder. -- The width of the rectangle used to be the circumference of the cylinder's round ends, while it was still rolled up.
It it's a rectangle, then the length one side is 450/(length of the next side) .
If the perimiter is 20 and one side is [[length]] then the other side is (10 - [[length]]). So the area is: [[length]] x (10 - [[length]]) square metres.
Since a square is also a rectangle the formula is length times width or the length of one side squared.
The length of a rectangle is typically considered to be the longer of the two sides, also referred to as the longer dimension. It is measured along the longer side of the rectangle from one end to the other.
Opposite sides have the same length. Other than that, you can't deduce the length of the OTHER two sides, since they can be anything.
No. The length is the measurement of the distance from the bottom to the top of the rectangle, or from one side to the other side. The perimeter is the distance all the way around the rectangle.