That depends on the height, and even with a certain height, there are still an infinite number of possible combinations of length and width. Whatever the height is, the product of (length x width) will be (18.2 divided by the height).
No. It has NO length, NO width, NO height. Only a position.No. It has NO length, NO width, NO height. Only a position.No. It has NO length, NO width, NO height. Only a position.No. It has NO length, NO width, NO height. Only a position.
You multiply the width or length by the the height.
You measure the height, width, and length.
All solid figures have length, width and height and, conversely, if a figure has length, width and height then it is a solid figure.
That depends on the height, and even with a certain height, there are still an infinite number of possible combinations of length and width. Whatever the height is, the product of (length x width) will be (18.2 divided by the height).
A plane
Plane
A point has no length, width, or thickness. A line has infinite length but no width or thickness. A plane has infinite length and width but no thickness.
No. It has NO length, NO width, NO height. Only a position.No. It has NO length, NO width, NO height. Only a position.No. It has NO length, NO width, NO height. Only a position.No. It has NO length, NO width, NO height. Only a position.
A line has infinite length, no width, no thickness, and no endpoints.
How about the number line
This would be a line, which has no width, no thickness and no endpoints, but has infinite length.
height*length*width = volume Divide both sides by length*width to find the height: height = volume divided by length*width
You really should know how to answer that question.Volume = (length) x (width) x (height) .Length = (volume) / (width x height)Width = (volume) / (length x height)Height = (volume) / (length x width)
You multiply the width or length by the the height.
volume = length*height*width Rearrange the formula: length = volume/height*width