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)
Depends on the problem; many 3D figures have 2D faces/shapes within them. One can say "find the perimeter of a cylinder," and the question could be interpreted as finding the perimeter of one of the circular bases of the cylinder. Use common sense, and find out what the question is asking.
It isn't clear how you would define the "perimeter" for a 3D figure. The base is the product of length x width.
You need to specify the perimeter of what figure. Overall, it is the sum of every side measurement of a polygon. For a circle it would be 2 times pi times the radius.
For a regular four-sided figure, area divided by length or half the perimeter minus the length.
There is no way to find perimeter from a 3D figure. However, you can find the perimeter of a side of a triangular prism by using perimeter formulas for a parallelogram or triangle.
In order to find the perimeter of a 3D rectangle you must gather the lengths of the known sides, calculate the missing rectangular values, and use the formula for perimeter.
Area is the number of square unit needed to cover a surface. Perimeter of a figure is the distance around the figure Perimeter is measurements of each sides added.
To find the distance around a figure, you calculate the perimeter. The perimeter is the total distance around the outside of a shape or figure. To find the perimeter of a rectangle or square, you add up all the sides. For a circle, you can find the perimeter by multiplying the diameter by π (pi).
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)
Depends on the problem; many 3D figures have 2D faces/shapes within them. One can say "find the perimeter of a cylinder," and the question could be interpreted as finding the perimeter of one of the circular bases of the cylinder. Use common sense, and find out what the question is asking.
It isn't clear how you would define the "perimeter" for a 3D figure. The base is the product of length x width.
You can't find the perimeter of a cone because it's a 3D shape, but you can find the volume; the formula is 1/3x3.14xr2xh (r= radius of the base/ h= height).
The distance round a closed figure is the perimeter.
how can you find the perimeter of a cone i.e. a 3d shape!
perimeter.
You need to specify the perimeter of what figure. Overall, it is the sum of every side measurement of a polygon. For a circle it would be 2 times pi times the radius.