It depends partly on the nature of the complex shape. Some complex shapes can be decomposed into smaller shapes whose areas can be determined using standard formulae. It is the simply a question of adding the parts together.
For more complicated shapes, there are essentially two options: you can either use uniform laminae and mass or estimate the area using grids.
Uniform Lamina: Copy the shape onto a sheet (lamina) of material with uniform density. Cut the shape out carefully and measure its mass (or weight). Do the same for a unit square of the lamina.
Then, because the lamina is of uniform density, the ratio of the two areas is the same as the ratio of the two masses.
That is: Area of Shape/Area of Unit Square = Mass of Shape/Mass of Unit Square =
Rearranging, and noting that the area of the Unit Square is, by definition, = 1 sq unit
Area of Shape = Mass of Shape/Mass of Unit Square.
Grid Method: Copy the shape onto a grid, where each grid square has an area of G square units. Count the number of squares that are fully or mostly inside the shape. Call this number W (for whole). Count the number of squares that are approximately half inside the shape and call this number H (for half). Ignore any square that are less than half in the shape.
Then a reasonable estimate of the area of the shape is G*[W + H/2] square units. There is some arbitrariness about "mostly inside" and "approximately half" but there is no way around that. You will get more accurate results with finer grids, but they will also require much more effort in terms of counting the grid squares.
Anywhere between 0 square feet and approx 998.2 square feet - it all depends upon the exact shape of the complex figure. To calculate the area of a complex figure, split it up into shapes for which you can workout the area and then add all the areas of the shapes together.
Area calculation involves determining the area of a geometric shape. For basic shapes such as circles, triangles and rectangles there are simple formulas to determine area based on linear dimensions. (see link) When you are faced with more complex shapes a strategy for area calculation is to first divide the complex shape into a series of triangles and then calculate the sum of the areas of these smaller shapes.Most CAD software has the built-in capability to calculate area of irregular shapes. In real estate there are established methods for calculating and allocating area to tenants for calculating rent. (see link)
It depends on the cross section which may be circular, elliptical, square, rectangular or of a more complex shape.
To find the area of irregular shapes, first, we need to divide the irregular shape into regular shapes that you can recognize such as triangles, rectangles, circles, squares and so forth. Then, find the area of these individual shapes and add them to get an area of irregular shap
There is no standard formula since a polyhedron can have a number of different shapes. A hexahendron, for example, can be a cuboid (6 rectangular faces) or a triangular dipyramid (6 triangular faces) or others. The number of different shapes increases rapidly as the number of sides (which determines the name) increases. The only solution is to calculate the area of each face and add them together.
Anywhere between 0 square feet and approx 998.2 square feet - it all depends upon the exact shape of the complex figure. To calculate the area of a complex figure, split it up into shapes for which you can workout the area and then add all the areas of the shapes together.
Area calculation involves determining the area of a geometric shape. For basic shapes such as circles, triangles and rectangles there are simple formulas to determine area based on linear dimensions. (see link) When you are faced with more complex shapes a strategy for area calculation is to first divide the complex shape into a series of triangles and then calculate the sum of the areas of these smaller shapes.Most CAD software has the built-in capability to calculate area of irregular shapes. In real estate there are established methods for calculating and allocating area to tenants for calculating rent. (see link)
You cut the shape down into smaller shapes that you recognise and know how to calculate the area of. Then calculate the area of the small shapes and add the all up.
You don't need to if you can manage to work out the perimeter and area of complex shapes. Most people cannot work easily with shapes other than triangles, quadrilaterals, circles and semicircles. For them (us) it is easier to partition the shape.
Calculate the area of the shape. The formula to be used will be different for different shapes.
It depends on the shape whose area you wish to calculate. Different shapes have different formulae.
You measure or calculate the area. How you do that will depend on the shapes involved.
It depends on the shape, whether it gives you the dimensions or not, or whether you can divide it up into separate shapes.
To find the area of a polygon, you generally need to first calculate the perpendicular height of the shape, and then multiply this by the base length. Formulas will vary depending on the type of polygon (such as triangle, rectangle, etc.). For more complex shapes, you may need to divide the shape into simpler forms to calculate the area.
Cut them into triangles and use the pythagorean theorem
To calculate the area of land with different dimensions (e.g. irregular shape), you can divide the land into basic geometric shapes like rectangles, triangles, and circles. Calculate the area of each shape separately using their respective formulas, then sum up these areas to get the total land area. If the land shape is complex, you can use mapping or surveying tools to accurately measure each section and then calculate the total area.
It is not. A triangle is one of the few plane shapes where decomposition will rarely help. Also, what is a complex triangle?