For a cuboid it gives its volume.
For a cuboid it equals the volume, but not for any other shape.
length *width*height=area of cuboid
By dividing length times width into its given volume
width = volume/(length*height)
For a cuboid it gives its volume.
It depends on which type of cuboid we are talking about. If it is a CUBE (a special type of cuboid), then it has nine planes of symmetry. If it is a cuboid with length, width and height all different, then it has three planes of symmetry. If it is a cuboid with two equal measurements (say width and length), then it has five planes of symmetry.
Length x width x height equals volume.* * * * *But only if the object in question is a cuboid (rectangular prism). Length*Width*Height for a sphere, for example, does not equal its volume.
For a cuboid it equals the volume, but not for any other shape.
length *width*height=area of cuboid
By dividing length times width into its given volume
width = volume/(length*height)
Volume = Length * Width * Height
the formula for the volume of a cuboid is quite simple,it is length multiply by width multiply by height.That's all.
It does not matter, as long as you label them correctly. However, generally speaking Length is either the longest side or the one that is horizontal. Height is vertical Width is whichever is left.
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Rectangles are flat or two dimensional. They have an area; they do not have a volume. The area of a rectangle is its length x width. If it was about the volume of a three dimensional Cuboid (or rectangular cuboid), its volume is the length x width x height.