using the pythagoren therum, a squared +b squared=c squared, if you are finding the hypotenuse square the other to sides and divide the answer to get the length of the hypotenuse otherwise square the hypotenuse and the known side and subtract the known side squared from the hypotenuse squared to find the lenght of the unknown side squared
Take the length of one side and square it. For example, if the side is 2 feet, then 2 squared (the number times itself) equals 4 feet.
Ok so area of a square is equal to the length of the side squared. So if we know the area we can take the square root to find the length of each side. Square root of 6.25 = 2.5 So the answer is 2.5
Solve this in two steps. First, based on the area, calculate the side of the length (square root of area, or by trial-and-error, find a side that, when squared, gives you 4). Then, calculate the perimeter as 4 times the length of the side.Solve this in two steps. First, based on the area, calculate the side of the length (square root of area, or by trial-and-error, find a side that, when squared, gives you 4). Then, calculate the perimeter as 4 times the length of the side.Solve this in two steps. First, based on the area, calculate the side of the length (square root of area, or by trial-and-error, find a side that, when squared, gives you 4). Then, calculate the perimeter as 4 times the length of the side.Solve this in two steps. First, based on the area, calculate the side of the length (square root of area, or by trial-and-error, find a side that, when squared, gives you 4). Then, calculate the perimeter as 4 times the length of the side.
If all you have is the length of two sides of a triangle and nothing else, you can find the last side length by going through the Pythagorean Theorem. the formula for the Pythagorean theorem is a squared + b squared = c squared. say the two lengths of the triangle are 3 and 2. to find the hypotenuse, or missing length, you must plug in the numbers. the two missing sides, or legs, are going to be a and b. so your equation would now look like this: 3 squared + 2 squared = c squared. 3 squared = 9, and 2 squared = 4. 9 +4 = 13. so your equation is: 13= c squared. next you would find the square root of 13 (which you would need a calculator) and the answer would be about 3.6. that would be the last length for your triangle.
Subtract the squared longer leg's squared length from the hypotenuse's square to obtain the squared shorter leg length. Then find the square root of that answer for your final answer. In other words: 53 squared minus 45 squared equals your squared answer.
A squared+ B squared=C squared. find the square root of the answer and you get the longest side.
a squared + b squared = c squareda squared + 12 squared = 15 squareda = square root(225 - 144)a = square root(81)a = 9
Since a square is also a rectangle the formula is length times width or the length of one side squared.
It is the length of one of the sides to the second power or squared.
A=lxw (length x width) or A=SL^2 (side length squared)
You square the width and subtract it from the diagonal squared. Then find the square root of this number, this number is now the length.
side squared More precise, Length x Width.
To find the length of a diagonal in a rectangle, use the Pythagorean method. Diagonal length = square root(length squared + height squared).
The surface area is length times width plus length. Then you find the square root of the width divided by two and then squared. You add this to the height squared plus the width. The width is multiplied by the square root of 1/2 squared plus the height squared.
Square meters measure area, not length, so it doesn't make sense to convert them directly to inches. If you were asking about the length of one side of a square that has an area of 1.27 square meters, you would calculate the square root of 1.27 square meters to find the length of each side in meters.
area = length by length. 3 x 3 = 9 units squared