No that would be a line
thought
It's a 'line'.
If the bar is a three dimensional object it will have some thickness. Then, assuming it is oblong in shape and knowing its length, width and thickness: Surface_area = 2 x (length x width + width x thickness + thickness x length)
A plane figure
A line has infinite length, no width, no thickness, and no endpoints.
This would be a line, which has no width, no thickness and no endpoints, but has infinite length.
No that would be a line
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.
thought
It's a 'line'.
A plane
A line fits this description.
Time has no length, width or thickness.
A point.
If the bar is a three dimensional object it will have some thickness. Then, assuming it is oblong in shape and knowing its length, width and thickness: Surface_area = 2 x (length x width + width x thickness + thickness x length)
The capacity of any book is infinite. If it can get a mind thinking, there is no limit to where that mind can go.If you are referring to the more mundane definition - of volume, then the answer is length x width x thickness in appropriate cubic units.The capacity of any book is infinite. If it can get a mind thinking, there is no limit to where that mind can go.If you are referring to the more mundane definition - of volume, then the answer is length x width x thickness in appropriate cubic units.The capacity of any book is infinite. If it can get a mind thinking, there is no limit to where that mind can go.If you are referring to the more mundane definition - of volume, then the answer is length x width x thickness in appropriate cubic units.The capacity of any book is infinite. If it can get a mind thinking, there is no limit to where that mind can go.If you are referring to the more mundane definition - of volume, then the answer is length x width x thickness in appropriate cubic units.