The formula for measuring the area of a square is s2, where s is the length of one of the sides. The perimeter would be 4s.
perimeter is the measure around the figure; area is the measure within the figure formula: perimeter: length+length+width+width=perimeter (for square or rectangle) area: length times width= area ( for square or rectangle)
54
What is the formula to determine the number of triangles in a given square of forty-four triangles?
One thing that area and perimeter have in common are that they both are measurements of a shape while perimeter is the distance around and area is the measurement of space within the object or space.
For a fixed area, the perimeter is minimum for a circle, but has no maximum. Fractal figures (such as Koch snowflake) may have a finite area within an infinite perimeter.
perimeter is the measure around the figure; area is the measure within the figure formula: perimeter: length+length+width+width=perimeter (for square or rectangle) area: length times width= area ( for square or rectangle)
54
What is the formula to determine the number of triangles in a given square of forty-four triangles?
Perimeter is measured in Linear Units because it is Measurement of The Outline or Path of a given shape or area; a Perimeter is NOT the Measurement of What is Inside that Outline/Path. It is a One-Dimensional measurement, which MEANS it is a Linear Unit Measurement, such as Feet or Meters.Alternatively, a Two-Dimensional Measurement, is the Square of a Linear Unit -- like AREA is a Two-Dimensional Measurement and therefore Measured in Linear Units Squared (i.e. meters2/Square Meters or feet2/Square Feet). Area is the Measurement of What is Contained within a given Perimeter.
The perimeter of a shape is the distance around the outside, for instance, the length of all the sides of a square added together. The area however, is the amount of space within the shape, for example, to find the area of a square, you would simply multiply the length of the side by length of the side.
One thing that area and perimeter have in common are that they both are measurements of a shape while perimeter is the distance around and area is the measurement of space within the object or space.
The perimeter of a shape is the total distance around its outer boundary. For a rectangle with sides of 9 meters and 4 meters, the perimeter would be calculated as P = 2(9) + 2(4) = 18 + 8 = 26 meters. The area of a shape is the total space enclosed within its boundaries. For the same rectangle, the area would be calculated as A = 9 * 4 = 36 square meters.
For a fixed area, the perimeter is minimum for a circle, but has no maximum. Fractal figures (such as Koch snowflake) may have a finite area within an infinite perimeter.
Eccentric circles.
This question is incomplete. There is no specific given information and/or the desired solution is indeterminate. However, the formula to calculate the area within a square is essentially the same as a rectangle. Area = l x w.
The clever person might realize that, though an infinite number of rectangles can be created with a fixed perimeter, there is a maximum and minimum area that any rectangle formed under the constriction can have. And we can work with that. The minimum area will be "near" zero. (With an area "at" zero, the rectangle will collapse and/or disappear.) The rectangle with "maximumized" area for a fixed perimeter will be a square. Its side (designated by "s") will be one fourth of the perimeter (designated by "p"). If s = p/4 and we use the formula for finding the area (As) of a square substituing our "p/4" for the side length "s" we will get the equation: As = (p/4)2 Our rectangle(s) will all have an area (Ar) within this range: Zero is less than Ar which is less than or equal to (p/4)2 Though we couldn't come up with a precise answer, we came up with the next best thing with the information supplied.
The radius of a circle is the distance from the center to any point on the circle. The area is the space within the circle. The formula to find the area is πr2. r stands for the radius of the circle. If you want to find the radius, you can work backwards from the area or the circumference, which is the perimeter of the circle. The formula for circumference is 2πr.