Zero. Points are zero dimensional objects. Straight lines are one dimensional objects. Planes and surfaces are two dimensional objects. Volumes and polyhedra are examples of three dimensional objects.
Only if you have two dimensional objects of specific sizes in specific combinations.
In geometry, shapes that have length and width but lack depth are two-dimensional. That is, they lie in a plane and do not occupy space. Examples are circles, squares, triangles, parallelograms, and various polygons. Those objects don't have volume but have area. Three-dimensional objects are called solids and have three dimensions: length, width, and depth (or height). They occupy space and have volume. Examples are spheres, cubes, cones, and cylinders, to name a few.
s area is on three dimensional objects, but area is on two dimensional objects.
That's more of a statement than a question. It's also a false statement. You can build a three dimensional object from two dimensional objects, if you have an infinite number of them.
Zero. Points are zero dimensional objects. Straight lines are one dimensional objects. Planes and surfaces are two dimensional objects. Volumes and polyhedra are examples of three dimensional objects.
A two dimensional object has a length and a width. In comparison, a three dimensional object has a length, a width, and a height.A square and a circle are two examples of two dimensional objects. When you draw them on paper, you are only drawing them in two dimensions. They do not come out of the paper, as they have no height.If they did have height, they would be three dimensional and would respectively be called a cube and a cylinder.
In geometry three-dimensional shapes are solid figures or objects or shapes that have three dimensions length, width, and height. Unlike two-dimensional shapes, three-dimensional shapes have thickness or depth. A cube and cuboid are examples of three-dimensional objects, as they have length, width, and height.
Only if you have two dimensional objects of specific sizes in specific combinations.
A map, painting, or photograph, are all two dimensional representatins of three dimensional objects
Yes, it's true
false
In geometry, shapes that have length and width but lack depth are two-dimensional. That is, they lie in a plane and do not occupy space. Examples are circles, squares, triangles, parallelograms, and various polygons. Those objects don't have volume but have area. Three-dimensional objects are called solids and have three dimensions: length, width, and depth (or height). They occupy space and have volume. Examples are spheres, cubes, cones, and cylinders, to name a few.
s area is on three dimensional objects, but area is on two dimensional objects.
That's more of a statement than a question. It's also a false statement. You can build a three dimensional object from two dimensional objects, if you have an infinite number of them.
All batteries are three dimensional objects not two dimensional.
Cubism attempted to find new ways to represent three-dimensional objects in a two-dimensional space.