The diameter of a circle is the width of the circle. The measurement in a straight line from edge to opposite edge passing through the centre.
Add the lenth+lenth+width+width Except for a circle
the width of a circle
For a circle, the length and width are the same: from one side of the circle to the opposite point is the same value. The diameter is the longest possible length of any line connecting two points on the circle. This differs from a square or rectangle, where the length or width is not the longest line, but rather the diagonal from opposite corners.
C = 12.6 cm
The width, or the length of a circle are its diameter.
The Width of a Circle was created on 1970-05-22.
there is no length or width of a circle. There is radius and circumference and the line that goes all the way through the center to the other side of the circle, which is twice the radius. But there is no length or width of a circle.
If the radius is 4, the width is 8 inches. If it is a 4 inch circle diametrically the width is 4 inches
Yes its diameter is its width which is constant where ever it's measured inside the circle
If the half circle is on its flat side, the radius is its height. If the straight part of the half-circle is vertical, the radius is its width.
Diameter and width are directly proportional in a circle. As the diameter of a circle increases, so does the width because width is measured along a line passing through the center of the circle. The relationship between the diameter and width remains constant for circles, with width always being half of the diameter.
What a strange question. A circle does not have a length or a width. It has a diameter and that all.
If by "width" you mean diameter, multiply the width by pi. Pi is roughly 3.14.
The diameter of a circle is the width of the circle. The measurement in a straight line from edge to opposite edge passing through the centre.
Width Of Circle X 3.14 or PII
diameter