a cube
Conventionally length is the longer dimension.
cube
no length multiply by width
The length is one dimension. You can measure it along one edge of the floor. The width is another dimension. You can measure it along another edge of the floor. The height is the third dimension. You can measure it in the corner where two walls meet.
One dimension: Length Two dimensions: Length, Width Three dimensions: Length, Width, Height
It depends on the definition of a room. What would the minimum width or length measurement be in a space, and still have it considered a room? With a minimum dimension to go off of, must the product of the width and length be exactly 1000 square feet? Must the width and length be in whole numbers?
It could be any room whose length and width multiplied together equal 88.
If it is a rectangle, the the dimension of Area [Distance²] is (Length) x (Width).So if the the length and width do not have units, then just say 'it is 50 units long' then the area is 1250 units²
a cube
Conventionally length is the longer dimension.
No. A point, as a mathematical concept, has no dimension. No length, no width nor depth (depht, even).
a cube
cube
no length multiply by width
The length is one dimension. You can measure it along one edge of the floor. The width is another dimension. You can measure it along another edge of the floor. The height is the third dimension. You can measure it in the corner where two walls meet.
Not if the wall is longer than the maximum dimension of the roomNot if the wall is longer than the maximum dimension of the roomNot if the wall is longer than the maximum dimension of the roomNot if the wall is longer than the maximum dimension of the room