If it also has two triangular faces, then a triangular prism. If it has only three rectangualr faces, there is no such shape.
In high school terms, a cylinder (not cilindor) has three faces, two edges and no vertices.In high school terms, a cylinder (not cilindor) has three faces, two edges and no vertices.In high school terms, a cylinder (not cilindor) has three faces, two edges and no vertices.In high school terms, a cylinder (not cilindor) has three faces, two edges and no vertices.
triangular prism
a cylinder
Three faces, two edges and 0 vertices.
I believe it is a cone, a cylinder has three faces.
Three dimensional objects have edges, vertices and faces. A face is a plane surface which forms a boundary of the shape. Two faces meet along a line which is an edge. Three or more faces meet at a point which is a vertex.
If it also has two triangular faces, then a triangular prism. If it has only three rectangualr faces, there is no such shape.
In high school terms, a cylinder (not cilindor) has three faces, two edges and no vertices.In high school terms, a cylinder (not cilindor) has three faces, two edges and no vertices.In high school terms, a cylinder (not cilindor) has three faces, two edges and no vertices.In high school terms, a cylinder (not cilindor) has three faces, two edges and no vertices.
triangular prism
a cylinder
Three faces, two edges and 0 vertices.
Three faces, two edges and 0 vertices.
The shape would be impossible. The faces and vertices have to add up to two more than the edges.
They are straight lines where two plane faces of the shape meet. The definition is sometimes extended to curved lines where curved (3d) faces meet such as at the base of a cone.
Cylinder * * * * * There is no convex 3-dimensional shape with these qualities. A cylinder has two plane faces plus a curved one, and two edges.
the place where two faces intersect