The answer will depend on formula for WHAT! Its dimensions, surface area, volume, principal diagonal, mass. And on what information is available.
The answer will depend on formula for WHAT! Its dimensions, surface area, volume, principal diagonal, mass. And on what information is available.
The answer will depend on formula for WHAT! Its dimensions, surface area, volume, principal diagonal, mass. And on what information is available.
The answer will depend on formula for WHAT! Its dimensions, surface area, volume, principal diagonal, mass. And on what information is available.
The height of the base is part of the triangle and the height of the prism is the height of the rectangle
The Formula is Base*Height, or 1/2 Height (altitude of the triangle) * Base (of the Triangle) * height (Height of the prism)
does a rectangle prism have 6 sides
It is a triangular prism
Technically it is a rectangular prism.
If the base is a rectangle, use the formula for the area of a rectangle.
The base of a rectangular prism is a base of a rectangle!
same as a rectangle, except multiply by height. Area of Base X Height or L*W*H
the base of a cube is a square but the base of a rectangle prism is a rectangle
The base of a rectangular prism is a rectangle. The area of a rectangle is length times width.
rectangle
It depends what kind of prism: Rectangular prism-rectangle Could be circle too. It depends on what kind of prism it is. If it is a rectangular prism, it's base is a rectangle. If it's a triangular prism, it's base will be a triangle. P.S.-If you have any other questions about prisms or geometry in general, feel free to ask me!
The base of a rectangular prism is just an old familiar 2D rectangle. All the old familiar 2D formulas for rectangles still apply to it.
A rectangle!
a rectangle of course
It is a rectangle.
The formula for the area of the base of a rectangular prism is length multiplied by width. In mathematical terms, this can be represented as A = l x w, where A is the area of the base, l is the length of the base, and w is the width of the base. This formula is derived from the concept of finding the product of two sides of a rectangle to determine its area.