You can't really determine that with its file size. 1 MiB does sort of limit the dimensions, but it can't specify dimensions any more than one could decide what the dimensions of an acreage are by square feet. Pretty much the only way to find out the dimensions of an image file is to open it up or look at its metadata.
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Length 1 and Width 17 Length 2 and Width 16 Length 3 and Width 15 Length 4 and Width 14 etc..... get the picture
Ratio of new length to old length = 12/8 = 3/2 So ratio of new width to old width must be 3/2 New width/Old width = 3/2 so New width = Old Width * 3/2 = 6 inches*3/2 = 9 inches
No If you have a picture of it you can use the measurements you know to give you the scale of the picture. Or if you don't have a picture you can use the length of your thumb viewed at arms length, and then calibrate using a known object, or better still, the known width.
Conventionally, the longer dimension of a rectangle is the length and the shorter is the width. However, with a picture you my prefer to think of width as the left-to-right distance - whether that is the arger or smaller of the two.
perimeter = length + length + width + width = 2*length + 2*width = 36 length = 5*width 2*(5*width) + 2*width = 36 12*width = 36 width = 3 length = 15