The answer depends on what te figure is and what you know - or can deduce - about other aspects of the figure. That information will determine whether or not there is a solution and what formula you may be able to use. However, since you have not bothered to share that crucial bit of information, I cannot provide a more useful answer.
It matters on what figure it is.
take a jar and fill it with water. then put the figure in the water and measure the difference in height of the water.
You need to tell us what shape your figure is...
multiply length x width x height.
The answer depends on what te figure is and what you know - or can deduce - about other aspects of the figure. That information will determine whether or not there is a solution and what formula you may be able to use. However, since you have not bothered to share that crucial bit of information, I cannot provide a more useful answer.
This is the formula for volume:l x h x w( length x height x width )
It matters on what figure it is.
if the dadadaa and you find the voulume
If the figure is a rectangle, the area is 60. If the figure is a triangle, the area is 30.
take a jar and fill it with water. then put the figure in the water and measure the difference in height of the water.
You need to tell us what shape your figure is...
The answer will depend on the figure. A circle or sphere, for example, has a different formula for whatever it is that you want to calculate.
H=9m
The base is the bottom of the figure and the height is how tall the figure is.
Work out each figure separately then add them together: Area of a trapezoid = 0.5*(sum of parallel bases)*height Area of a rectangle = length*height
LxWxH L=Length W=Width H=Height