The "area" of any shape means how much space it covers
on the floor, table, wall, land, paper, etc.
It takes more grass seed to plant a lawn on more land 'area',
and less paint to cover a wall with less 'area'. When you buy
carpet, they ask you the 'area' of the floor you need to cover.
The answer depends on what you mean by "mean of triangle". There is no such geometric term.
I'm not sure what you mean by the definition but here is the formula: Area = ½ × b × h
If the area was 0, there would be no triangle.
The area of triangle is : 4.0
If you mean "altitude", and by that you mean the height of the top of the triangle above its base, then draw a line from the top of the triangle to the base, at right angles to the base, and measure that line. Alternately, the height of a triangle above its base is twice the area divided by the base length.
The answer depends on what you mean by "mean of triangle". There is no such geometric term.
The 3 external angles of a triangle add up to 360 degrees Area of a triangle is 0.5*base*height
The area of qa triangle is always half of the area of a rectangle with the same dimensions
The area of a rectangle is length x width. The area of a triangle is 1/2 base x height. If you mean a rectangle, the area is 70 square units. If you mean a triangle, the area is 35 square units.
I'm not sure what you mean by the definition but here is the formula: Area = ½ × b × h
Area of Equilateral Triangle A= S2 * (Root 3)/4, where A= Area of the triangle S= Side of the triangle.
The area of a triangle can be calculated with one main formula. That is, A=(b*h)/2, where A is the area of the triangle, b is the base of the triangle, and h is the height of the triangle.
If the area was 0, there would be no triangle.
The area of triangle is : 24.0
The area of triangle is : 4.0
The area of triangle is : 1620.0
If you mean "altitude", and by that you mean the height of the top of the triangle above its base, then draw a line from the top of the triangle to the base, at right angles to the base, and measure that line. Alternately, the height of a triangle above its base is twice the area divided by the base length.