Then they both will have the same perimeter
A square 4 squares in the middle and 4 lines out so it has to be a square!!! actually a square does not have the same perimeter and area a 4x4 area square has 8 perimeter so no squares do not but i have made a shape that has 32 perimeter and 32 area so it is possible and we don't want to tell you what the shape is. i already gave you too much information with the 32.... << inccorect A 4x4 square does have the same perimeter and area 4x4=16 4+4+4+4=16 But there are also other shapes such as a circle witha diameter of 2 A right angled triangle with sides of 6, and 8 and the hypotenuse being 10 has the same area as perimeter.
No, a square cannot have the same area but different perimeters. The area of a square is calculated as the side length squared (A = s²), and the perimeter is calculated as four times the side length (P = 4s). Since both area and perimeter depend solely on the side length, if two squares have the same area, they must have the same side length, and consequently, the same perimeter.
because it has 16 squares in it so it would have 4 cm for each length i think its 16 tho it is strange that the area and the perimiter are the same...
no
Yes they are
yes
A square 4 squares in the middle and 4 lines out so it has to be a square!!! actually a square does not have the same perimeter and area a 4x4 area square has 8 perimeter so no squares do not but i have made a shape that has 32 perimeter and 32 area so it is possible and we don't want to tell you what the shape is. i already gave you too much information with the 32.... << inccorect A 4x4 square does have the same perimeter and area 4x4=16 4+4+4+4=16 But there are also other shapes such as a circle witha diameter of 2 A right angled triangle with sides of 6, and 8 and the hypotenuse being 10 has the same area as perimeter.
No, a square cannot have the same area but different perimeters. The area of a square is calculated as the side length squared (A = s²), and the perimeter is calculated as four times the side length (P = 4s). Since both area and perimeter depend solely on the side length, if two squares have the same area, they must have the same side length, and consequently, the same perimeter.
Yes, if the perimeters are the same, then both of them have side = perimeter / 4. And of course the angles are all 90°, since they are squares.
because it has 16 squares in it so it would have 4 cm for each length i think its 16 tho it is strange that the area and the perimiter are the same...
no
No !
Yes they are
Yes, two squares of different sizes can have the same perimeter. The perimeter of a square is calculated using the formula ( P = 4s ), where ( s ) is the length of a side. If two squares have side lengths such that ( 4s_1 = 4s_2 ), where ( s_1 ) and ( s_2 ) are the side lengths of the two squares, they will have the same perimeter. However, because the side lengths are different, the squares themselves will differ in size.
You can't. The perimeter doesn't tell the area. There are an infinite number of shapes with different dimensions and different areas that all have the same perimeter.
You can't. The perimeter doesn't tell the area. There are an infinite number of shapes with different dimensions and different areas that all have the same perimeter.
No, not if they are squares.