radius = diameter/2
radius = circumference/2*pi
It matters on what figure it is.
a two dimensional figure is flat. it only has length and width. three dimensional figures have length, width and height. A square is a 2 dimensional figure, but a cube is a 3 dimensional figure.
No. It has NO length, NO width, NO height. Only a position.No. It has NO length, NO width, NO height. Only a position.No. It has NO length, NO width, NO height. Only a position.No. It has NO length, NO width, NO height. Only a position.
Solids have three dimensions.Two-dimensional figures have length and width, and you can use these to calculate the area.Three-dimensional figures (i.e., solids) have length, width, and depth, and you can use these to calculate the volume.
A three-dimensional geometric figure is called a solid. Solids have length, width, and height, distinguishing them from two-dimensional shapes that only have length and width. Common examples of three-dimensional solids include cubes, spheres, cylinders, and pyramids.
A 3D figure shows length, width and depth. While a 2D figure only shows length and width.
It matters on what figure it is.
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 two dimensional figure is flat. it only has length and width. three dimensional figures have length, width and height. A square is a 2 dimensional figure, but a cube is a 3 dimensional figure.
No. It has NO length, NO width, NO height. Only a position.No. It has NO length, NO width, NO height. Only a position.No. It has NO length, NO width, NO height. Only a position.No. It has NO length, NO width, NO height. Only a position.
A 3D figure has length x width x depth. It becomes a 2D figure once the removed surface is laid flat, having then only length x width. Another name is "Plane Figure."
Solids have three dimensions.Two-dimensional figures have length and width, and you can use these to calculate the area.Three-dimensional figures (i.e., solids) have length, width, and depth, and you can use these to calculate the volume.
A plane figure has 2 dimensions (length & width$ & is represented by a flat surface. It takes 3 noncollinear points to make a plane. A solid figure has 3 dimensions. It not only has length & width but also depth. It takes 4 noncoplaner points to make space
Measure...is the length twice the width or 3 times. If so, then just multiply that amount, then figure like normal.
Strictly speaking, the only geometric item that has neither length nor width is a "point", but as such, it is not considered a "figure". A geometric figure is defined as a "set of points". I suppose a point could be thought of as a set containing only one element, but that rather contradicts the intention of the definition where it refers to points in the plural.As Euclid defined it: A figure is that which is contained by any boundary or boundaries.
A three-dimensional geometric figure is called a solid. Solids have length, width, and height, distinguishing them from two-dimensional shapes that only have length and width. Common examples of three-dimensional solids include cubes, spheres, cylinders, and pyramids.
They are 2 dimensional shapes that only have length and width.