You have to multiply the two dimensions to get the area. In this case the answer will be 192 square feet in the shed.
You have to multiply the two dimensions to get the area. In this case the answer will be 97.75 square feet.
1944 feet squared
The answer depends on the units used for the measurements given in the question: feet, yards, metres, ...
Yes. The area of that shed is 34.8386 m².
You have to multiply the two dimensions to get the area. In this case the answer will be 192 square feet in the shed.
You have to multiply the two dimensions to get the area. In this case the answer will be 97.75 square feet.
1944 feet squared
The shed covers 196 square feet of ground, and the area of its ceiling is also 196 square feet. The area of each wall is (14 x height of the shed).
The answer depends on the units used for the measurements given in the question: feet, yards, metres, ...
Yes. The area of that shed is 34.8386 m².
If the full question wasMr. Chambliss is planning to build a shed with a rectangular floor. In his original plan, the length of the floor was 7 feet and the area of the floor was 35 square feet. In his new plan, he wants to extend the length by 3 more feet. If the total area of the shed will be 70 square feet, by how many feet will he have to extend the width?then the answer is 2 feet.
well its 38
For area measurements, you multiply the length by the width. Here the calculation gives you an answer of 96 square feet.
The answer depends on the units used for 20 x 10. It should be blindingly obvious to anybody that the answer for 20 feet x 10 feet and 20 metres x 10 metres, for example, will be very different.
To calculate the total square meters of the outside surface area of your shed, you need to find the area of each side and then add them together. Let's break it down: The shed has four walls: Two walls measuring 16 feet long by 8 feet high (front and back) Two walls measuring 9 feet wide by 8 feet high (sides) Calculate the area of each wall: Front and back walls: 16 feet long * 8 feet high = 128 square feet each Side walls: 9 feet wide * 8 feet high = 72 square feet each Add up the areas of all four walls: Total area for front and back walls: 2 * 128 square feet = 256 square feet Total area for side walls: 2 * 72 square feet = 144 square feet Add the areas of all walls together to get the total surface area: Total surface area = 256 square feet + 144 square feet = 400 square feet Now, to convert square feet to square meters, you can use the conversion factor: 1 square meter = 10.764 square feet. So, to find the area in square meters: 400 square feet * (1 square meter / 10.764 square feet) β 37.16 square meters Therefore, the total outside surface area of your shed is approximately 37.16 square meters. Now, to determine how much cladding you need, it depends on the type of cladding and its dimensions. You would need to calculate the area covered by each piece of cladding and then divide the total surface area of the shed by the area covered by one piece of cladding. This will give you the number of pieces needed.
The volume of the shed is width times length times height. So height is 440/(10x8) = 44/8 = 11/2 = 5 1/2. However, this is the average height. The shed could be 6 feet high at one end and 5 feet high at the other. It could also be 11 feet high at one end and 0 feet high at the other. So the maximum interior height is 11 feet.