Wiki User
∙ 2016-04-10 00:36:04False.To find the surface area of a three-dimensional figure, find the area of the faces and add them together.
Wiki User
∙ 2016-04-10 00:36:04Wiki User
∙ 2016-04-10 00:37:34Almost. The correction would be:
To find the surface area of a three dimensional figure you must find the area of each of its faces and then ADD THESE SIDE-AREAS together.
Anonymous
True, I hat-e wiki there always wrong
Landon Cube
JORDAN CASSIDY
TRUE: To find the surface area of a three dimensional figure, you must find the area of each of its faces and then add them together.
... face and add them together.
A face is a flat surface of a 3 dimensional figure.
A cuboid and a pyramid for examples.
it's called a face
No, you must add, not multiply.
NO. This is the way to get the volume of a prism, not the surface area of any three-dimensional figure. To find the surface area of a three-dimensional figure, you must find the area of each of its faces and then add the side-areas together.
False. You must find the area of each of the faces, then add those together.
TRUE: To find the surface area of a three dimensional figure, you must find the area of each of its faces and then add them together.
That is not true: for a pyramid, for example.
You need to find the area of each two dimensional surface on the figure. Do you have a specific figure in mind?
Well it matters if you put it in a 3-dimensional or a 2-dimensional figure because if you turn it into a 3-dimensional figure the the surface would have a flat surface with volume and area.If you draw a quad in 2-D then the figure you draw is the surface.
... face and add them together.
A plane figure.
Sphere
A face
cube