It is not clear what you mean by an incomplete rectangle. If it means the rectangle is not closed then there is a problem of defining its area: what is inside and what is outside when you do not have a boundary? It is not clear what you mean by an incomplete rectangle. If it means the rectangle is not closed then there is a problem of defining its area: what is inside and what is outside when you do not have a boundary? It is not clear what you mean by an incomplete rectangle. If it means the rectangle is not closed then there is a problem of defining its area: what is inside and what is outside when you do not have a boundary? It is not clear what you mean by an incomplete rectangle. If it means the rectangle is not closed then there is a problem of defining its area: what is inside and what is outside when you do not have a boundary?
The area of qa triangle is always half of the area of a rectangle with the same dimensions
It's half the area of a rectangle
Area of a rectangle: a = l * w
Area of a rectangle = length x width
It is not clear what you mean by an incomplete rectangle. If it means the rectangle is not closed then there is a problem of defining its area: what is inside and what is outside when you do not have a boundary? It is not clear what you mean by an incomplete rectangle. If it means the rectangle is not closed then there is a problem of defining its area: what is inside and what is outside when you do not have a boundary? It is not clear what you mean by an incomplete rectangle. If it means the rectangle is not closed then there is a problem of defining its area: what is inside and what is outside when you do not have a boundary? It is not clear what you mean by an incomplete rectangle. If it means the rectangle is not closed then there is a problem of defining its area: what is inside and what is outside when you do not have a boundary?
If you mean area, then, the area of a rectangle is width * height. So...50cm^2.
The area of a rectangle is length x width. The area of a triangle is 1/2 base x height. If you mean a rectangle, the area is 70 square units. If you mean a triangle, the area is 35 square units.
No. For example, a 4x1 rectangle will have an area of 4 and a perimeter of 10. A 2x2 rectangle will have the same area of 4, but a perimeter of 8.
The area of qa triangle is always half of the area of a rectangle with the same dimensions
There is no "height" of a rectangle, unless it's a rectangular prism. Do you mean the length? If you have the area of the rectangle, the equation should be:A= L x WPlug in the area and the length and solve for the width, or plug in the area the width of the rectangle, and solve for the length.
Rectangle area = (rectangle width) x (rectangle height)
A = lw Area of a rectangle = length times width
The area of rectangle is : 35.0
Do you mean area or volume - you've included THREE measurements !
It's half the area of a rectangle
The area of rectangle is : 168.0