With great difficulty - it is impossible without further information.For example:A triangle with sides 3, 4, 5 - base 3, height 4 has area 6 units2;a triangle with sides 2, 6, ~6.32 (√40) - base 2 height 6 has area 6 units2.Both the triangles have the same area but different sides; those are both right angled triangles, but other ones are possible, eg a triangle with sides 2.5, ~4.92 (1/2 x √97), 6 also has base 6 and height 2 and an area 6 units2.
6 x 6 = 36 square inches
Yes. 3+2+6=11. If you divide 11 and 3, your answer is 3r2. You will have two 3 inch sides and one 5 inch side.
The sides are 6 and 8 and so the area is 0.5*6*8 = 24 cm2.
In our example, the area of the equilateral triangle is 1/6 of the area of the regular hexagon
Area = 6*6 = 36 square inches
36 inches
36 in2
With great difficulty - it is impossible without further information.For example:A triangle with sides 3, 4, 5 - base 3, height 4 has area 6 units2;a triangle with sides 2, 6, ~6.32 (√40) - base 2 height 6 has area 6 units2.Both the triangles have the same area but different sides; those are both right angled triangles, but other ones are possible, eg a triangle with sides 2.5, ~4.92 (1/2 x √97), 6 also has base 6 and height 2 and an area 6 units2.
6 x 6 = 36 square inches
triangle
Yes. 3+2+6=11. If you divide 11 and 3, your answer is 3r2. You will have two 3 inch sides and one 5 inch side.
The sides are 6 and 8 and so the area is 0.5*6*8 = 24 cm2.
That's oddly worded. You can't find the area of a perimeter. Either way, we need to know how many sides there are. A square with 6-inch sideshas a perimeter of 24 inches and an area of 36 square inches.
A triangle with side a: 6, side b: 4, and side c: 4 inches has an area of 7.94 square inches.
In our example, the area of the equilateral triangle is 1/6 of the area of the regular hexagon
The area of a square with 6in sides is 36in squared because 6x6=36.