2 edges, 0 corners, 2 faces
A cilinder has: 3 faces, 0 corners and 2 edges.
2 faces 1 edge
No. Faces + Vertices = Edges + 2 (The Euler characteristic of simply connected polyhedra).
I presume that you mean "16 edges" by "16 sides".An object with 6 faces, 8 corners and 16 edges violates Euler's rule thatfaces + corners = edges + 2(6 + 8 = 14 ≠ 16 + 2) - if it existed, that is.If it had 6 faces, 8 corners and 12 edges it would be a cuboid.
what shape has 2 faces 0 edges and 0 corners
2 edges, 0 corners, 2 faces
A cilinder has: 3 faces, 0 corners and 2 edges.
2 edges (curved), 0 corners, and 3 faces (one of which is not flat) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- A cylinder has 0 vertices (corners), 0 edges, and 2 faces. If you need convincing, my proof is Euler's formula, which which relates all three and is true for all solids in Euclidean 3-space: V + F - E = 2 0 + 2 - 0 = 2 You cannot consider the curved boundaries when counting faces or edges.
mobius strip
No such shape exists. The closest contenders would be: a cylinder - 3 faces, 2 edges, 0 verticies or a cone - 2 faces, 1 edge, 1 vertex
Answer #1:A Sphere.This answer is under debate. See the Related Question below.Answer#2:A point
2 faces 1 edge
No. Faces + Vertices = Edges + 2 (The Euler characteristic of simply connected polyhedra).
I presume that you mean "16 edges" by "16 sides".An object with 6 faces, 8 corners and 16 edges violates Euler's rule thatfaces + corners = edges + 2(6 + 8 = 14 ≠ 16 + 2) - if it existed, that is.If it had 6 faces, 8 corners and 12 edges it would be a cuboid.
2 faces, 1 edge and 1 corner
A prism with an n-sided base will have 2n vertices, n + 2 faces, and 3n edges. 12 faces, 24 edges, 16 vertices