Without knowing any other property of that triangle, you can't.
It is impossible. You need another measurement, such as angle, side length or area etc.
-- Measure or calculate the length of one side. -- Measure or calculate the length of another side. -- Measure or calculate the length of the only remaining side. -- Add the three numbers. The sum is the perimeter of the triangle.
a rectangle as a longer side because there's 48 inches for a rectangle but there's only 45 inches for a triangle. a rectangle as a longer side because there's 48 inches for a rectangle but there's only 45 inches for a triangle.
Not possible, you need at least the length of two sides and the included angle.
Only by the definition of a perimeter.
It is impossible. You need another measurement, such as angle, side length or area etc.
You cannot discover the perimeter of a triangle if all you have is the length of two sides and nothing else. Knowing only the length of two sides of a triangle is insufficient to discover the length of the third side, and, thereby, discover the perimeter. Use the link below to a related question and see how it works.
-- Measure or calculate the length of one side. -- Measure or calculate the length of another side. -- Measure or calculate the length of the only remaining side. -- Add the three numbers. The sum is the perimeter of the triangle.
Its impossible to isolate both the length and width, but you can figure out the sum of one pair of length and width, which is 13.
a rectangle as a longer side because there's 48 inches for a rectangle but there's only 45 inches for a triangle. a rectangle as a longer side because there's 48 inches for a rectangle but there's only 45 inches for a triangle.
-- Measure or calculate the length of one side. -- Measure or calculate the length of another side. -- Measure or calculate the length of the only remaining side. -- Add the three numbers. The sum is the perimeter of the triangle. ----------------------------------- The perimeter is the sum of all three sides. Sometimes it is unnecessary to compute each side length; all we care about is the sum.
The perimeter doesn't tell you the length of any of the sides. There are an infinite number of different triangles that all have the same perimeter. The only thing you can tell from a 63-in perimeter is that no side can be 31.5 inches or more.
Not possible, you need at least the length of two sides and the included angle.
From only the perimeter you cannot.
Only by the definition of a perimeter.
Knowing only the angles of a triangle does not provide enough information to determine its perimeter. You must know the length of at least one side.
You can't solve the question. If it is a regular polygon of n sides, then the length of each side would be 48cm/n. However, the only givens are that the figure is a polygon and that the perimeter is 48cm.