If you include a row or column of 1, the answer is 4: 1 by 6, 2 by 3, 3 by 2, and 6 by 1.
Oh, what a happy little question! If you have 32 tiles and want to arrange them in equal rows and columns, you could have 1 row of 32 tiles, 2 rows of 16 tiles, 4 rows of 8 tiles, 8 rows of 4 tiles, or 16 rows of 2 tiles. Each arrangement brings its own unique beauty to the canvas of possibilities. Just remember, there are many ways to create a masterpiece with those tiles!
Equal to what ?... There are many 'magic square' possibilities depending on the rule for the total. For example - the following grid produces a magic square where all rows, columns and diagonals total 15 ! 816 357 492
To do that, we'll need the factor pairs of 120. (120, 1) (60, 2) (40, 3) (30, 4) (24, 5) (20, 6) (15, 8) (12, 10) Choose the pairs that have an odd and even number. Looks like 4 of them.
depends how long the car is
The number of different ways to arrange 13 items is calculated using the factorial of 13, denoted as 13!. This is equal to 13 × 12 × 11 × ... × 3 × 2 × 1, which amounts to 6,227,020,800 different arrangements. Thus, there are 6,227,020,800 unique ways to arrange 13 items.
8
4
Oh, what a happy little question! If you have 32 tiles and want to arrange them in equal rows and columns, you could have 1 row of 32 tiles, 2 rows of 16 tiles, 4 rows of 8 tiles, 8 rows of 4 tiles, or 16 rows of 2 tiles. Each arrangement brings its own unique beauty to the canvas of possibilities. Just remember, there are many ways to create a masterpiece with those tiles!
Equal to what ?... There are many 'magic square' possibilities depending on the rule for the total. For example - the following grid produces a magic square where all rows, columns and diagonals total 15 ! 816 357 492
16
a trillion.
To do that, we'll need the factor pairs of 120. (120, 1) (60, 2) (40, 3) (30, 4) (24, 5) (20, 6) (15, 8) (12, 10) Choose the pairs that have an odd and even number. Looks like 4 of them.
If real cars less than one car, if toy cars about twenty to thirty, maybe forty!
2 rows of 18 squares3 rows of 12 squares4 rows of 9 squares6 rows of 6 squares9 rows of 4 squares12 rows of 3 squares18 rows of 2 squares36 rows of 1 squareI would not count "1 row of 36 squares", because you only have a single row that cannot equal another row (there is only one rowafter all). If this is for homework, I would state your reasoning for excluding (or including) that set. Count all the options up, and you have 8 different ways you can arrange the rows with the exclusion.
depends how long the car is
1
There are eight rows and eight columns .