You must use the information given that describes that particular rectangle,
together with the laws, equations, and formulas you have that relate to the
properties of rectangles, to derive the missing information.
The answer will depend on what dimension is missing and what information you do have.
You must use the information given that describes that particular rectangle,
together with the laws, equations, and formulas you have that relate to the
properties of rectangles, to derive the missing information.
The answer will depend on what dimension is missing and what information you do have.
The new dimensions are 4cm and 7cm
To calculate the volume of a rectangle, you must multiply the length, the width, and the height--so the volume depends on the dimensions.
If the length of a rectangle is twice its width and it has a perimeter of 48, then the rectangle is 16 in length and 8 in width.
this is a funky question... 8x10 kilometers
22+27+22+27
Area of rectangle with part of the shape missing = area of rectangle (lengthxwidth)-area of missing part.
The dimensions for area are [L2]
length times width
27:55
You can't tell the dimensions of a rectangle from its area, or the dimensions of a prism from its volume.
Find the dimensions of the rectangle of largest area that can be inscribed in a circle of radius a in C programming
The new dimensions are 4cm and 7cm
a rectangle has a perimeter of 72m. If the length is 20 m longer than the width find its dimensions?
You don't
You could share what information you did have and then there may be a way to get the missing dimensions. As it is, there is nothing that can be said other than to suggest that you measure them.
The dimensions are W and W+M where W is the width.
The dimensions are 10 m by 6.5 m and so 10*6.5 = 65 square m