Because perimeter means outside.
Circle = Circumferance. Triangle = Perimeter. Perimeter for a Triangle, you count up the number of units on it.
You count the inside squares of the figure.
count the grids
Count the number of grid squares which are entirely or almost entirely inside the figure = ACount the number of grid squares which are approximately half (or more) inside = B Estimated area = A + B/2.
That's because "perimeter" means the distance around something - not the spaces inside. If you count squares inside a figure, you are finding the AREA, not the PERIMETER.
Because of the definition of what "perimeter" means. It's the distance around the figure ... the distance an ant has to walk to get back to where he started, if he stays on the line. The ant doesn't know or care how many spaces are inside the figure or what size they are. He's simply staying on the line all the way, watching his pedometer and keeping track of how far he has to walk to arrive at "GO" .
Because perimeter means outside.
perimeter
perimeter
Spaces are not words. Nor do you type spaces into words. Spaces separate words.
Circle = Circumferance. Triangle = Perimeter. Perimeter for a Triangle, you count up the number of units on it.
You have to count how many spaces that your rock went when you threw it and if you want to make it more educational then you can count how many spaces you hopped on
You have to count the lines on a solid figure
You count the inside squares of the figure.
LEN will count spaces in a cell as well as other characters. So there is no special way needed to count spaces as they will be included. If you are counting what is in cell A3 for example, then you would use the function: =LEN(A3) To count only the spaces in a cell and ignoring other characters, then you could try this approach: =LEN(A3)-LEN(SUBSTITUTE(A3," ","")) It gets the full length and then substracts the length of the text with the spaces removed.
Yes