No
If you have a picture of it you can use the measurements you know to give you the scale of the picture. Or if you don't have a picture you can use the length of your thumb viewed at arms length, and then calibrate using a known object, or better still, the known width.
Length, Width, Height. Faces, Corners and sides.
A 3D shape stands for Three-Dimensional. The three dimensions are Height, Width and Depth. A line just has height, so it is 1D. A polygon has both Height and width so it's 2D. A three dimensional object has all three; Height, Width and Depth.________^Height/Length = 1D-------------------| || | Depth |/ |----------------- |
length and height is the same thing it is the height from the bottom to the top of the figure and width is the measurement across and object
Length times width times height LxWxH=V
The usual protocol for stating sizes is "height, width, and depth", but these are subjective descriptions based on the orientation of the measured object or space. Practically speaking, the two larger numbers of the set can be used as the height and width, and the smallest the thickness or depth.
An edge* * * * *No. An edge is a line, which is a 1 dimensional concept. A solid object (a 3-dimensional object) will have height, width and depth.
Length, Width, Height. Faces, Corners and sides.
A three dimensional object
A 3D shape stands for Three-Dimensional. The three dimensions are Height, Width and Depth. A line just has height, so it is 1D. A polygon has both Height and width so it's 2D. A three dimensional object has all three; Height, Width and Depth.________^Height/Length = 1D-------------------| || | Depth |/ |----------------- |
length and height is the same thing it is the height from the bottom to the top of the figure and width is the measurement across and object
width x height x depth or length x width x height
Length times width times height LxWxH=V
width, depth and height
length width height depth ...
Height - is the distance from the ground to the top of an object... width is the distance across the widest part... and depth is the measurement from front to back.
The usual protocol for stating sizes is "height, width, and depth", but these are subjective descriptions based on the orientation of the measured object or space. Practically speaking, the two larger numbers of the set can be used as the height and width, and the smallest the thickness or depth.
This is the formula for volume:l x h x w( length x height x width )