There are 12 such combinations possible (all measurements in cm):
1 × 1 × 72
1 × 2 × 36
1 × 3 × 24
1 × 4 × 18
1 × 6 × 12
1 × 8 × 9
2 × 2 × 18
2 × 3 × 12
2 × 4 × 9
2 × 6 × 6
3 × 3 × 8
3 × 4 × 6
It depends on which type of cuboid we are talking about. If it is a CUBE (a special type of cuboid), then it has nine planes of symmetry. If it is a cuboid with length, width and height all different, then it has three planes of symmetry. If it is a cuboid with two equal measurements (say width and length), then it has five planes of symmetry.
the formula for the volume of a cuboid is length x breadth x height
These seem to be measurements for a three-dimensional object, most likely a cuboid solid, or a tank. One of the measurements would be the height, another the length and the last the width. Whatever units are involved, the object would have a volume of 102,510 cubic units.
Volume = Length * Width * Height
Find the volume of a cuboid of length 7cm breath 5cm and height 6cm
It depends on which type of cuboid we are talking about. If it is a CUBE (a special type of cuboid), then it has nine planes of symmetry. If it is a cuboid with length, width and height all different, then it has three planes of symmetry. If it is a cuboid with two equal measurements (say width and length), then it has five planes of symmetry.
Height in a cuboid is the measurement of the vertical distance between the top and bottom faces of the shape. It can also be referred to as the measurement of the length of one of the sides of the cuboid that has its opposite sides as bases.
The area of a parallelogram is the base times the height; the height must be measured perpendicular to the base. If you correctly measure the height perpendicular to the base and you get different measurements, then you are NOT dealing with a parallelogram.
length *width*height=area of cuboid
It depends on what numbers are squared. The length, width and height MUST be linear measures: they cannot be given in square units. You could have been given the areas of the faces, in which case there is a simple but different method to calculate the volume.
The answer depends on what information you have about it.
It means that Length + Breadth + Height of your cuboid shaped luggage is 115 inches.
the formula for the volume of a cuboid is length x breadth x height
Measure it!
With great difficulty because more information about the dimensions of the cuboid are required.
These seem to be measurements for a three-dimensional object, most likely a cuboid solid, or a tank. One of the measurements would be the height, another the length and the last the width. Whatever units are involved, the object would have a volume of 102,510 cubic units.
The answer depends on what information you have. One possible answer is height = volume divided by base area.