It is impossible. You need another measurement, such as angle, side length or area etc.
yes
Sum of dimensions of all sides
No, the hypotenuse of a triangle does not represent a third dimension. A triangle is a 2 dimensional figure consisting of only dimensions in terms of x and y. In order to be a 3d figure it would need dimensions defined in terms of x, y, and z.
Without knowing any other property of that triangle, you can't.
Pythagoras worked out that for any right angle triangle that its hypotenuse when squared is equal to the sum of its squared sides.
The hypotenuse is the largest side of a right angle triangle
yes
Sum of dimensions of all sides
No, the hypotenuse of a triangle does not represent a third dimension. A triangle is a 2 dimensional figure consisting of only dimensions in terms of x and y. In order to be a 3d figure it would need dimensions defined in terms of x, y, and z.
We use perimeter to measure the length and breadth so that we can easily find out the measurement of a figure
Without knowing any other property of that triangle, you can't.
Pythagoras worked out that for any right angle triangle that its hypotenuse when squared is equal to the sum of its squared sides.
If it is and equilateral triangle, the perimeter is 12, otherwise it is impossible to figure out without any angle measurements or other sides lengths
There is no way to find perimeter from a 3D figure. However, you can find the perimeter of a side of a triangular prism by using perimeter formulas for a parallelogram or triangle.
Any shape you want. "Perimeter" is not some esoteric function, it is merely the total measurement of the sides of the figure.
Both are the measurement of the outside edge of a figure, circumference relates specifically to a circle, and perimeter refers to polygons.
7.5 units of length.