I'm sorry, but I cannot see the figure you're referring to. If you can describe the object or provide details about the blocks and pegs, I would be happy to help you determine which combination forms the object.
It is: 5 blocks in length
its 6
10 raised to power 4
Add all sides together to get the perimeter.
No. If there were any way to figure out which numbers will be drawn next, it would be a fixed, rigged, dishonest game.
n^2 (figure number squared)
It is: 5 blocks in length
The Moshi Monsters forum is a good place to look for combinations. You can plant seeds and try to work out the combinations for yourself. Cluekoo in the moshling garden will help you figure out the combinations. There are several questions on Answers.com that list the combinations.
6
No. You have to figure that out on your own. But no.
its 6
Take the dimensions and figure it out. Break the object into shapes that you know how to figure the volume of (rectilinear blocks, parallelipeds, tetrahedra, etc) an add the volumes together (don't forget that symmetry can help a lot so you do nto have to figure so many different pieces).
you wil have to figure it out, is it your homework?
figure it out then tell me :)
The rearrangement of 5 figure numbers will be 5x4x3x2x1 which is 120 combinations, when you don't repeat a number.
There are few enough that if you write them down (combinations of 4 out of 6 ingredients), you can figure out all possible combinations and try all of them. 1234 1245 1246 1345 etc. Yes, there is a prince! And no, the order of ingredients does not matter.
If you have N things and want to find the number of combinations of R things at a time then the formula is [(Factorial N)] / [(Factorial R) x (Factorial {N-R})]