Square is a special case of a rectangle and the same formula may be used to find the perimeter
yes
If the side of the square is of length s then the perimeter is 4*s.
Perimeter of a square = 4 x (length of any one side)
The formula for the perimeter of a rectangle with length L and width W is P = 2*(L + W) In a square, the length and width are the same. So L = W And so A = 2*(L + L) = 2*(2L) = 4*L
Square is a special case of a rectangle and the same formula may be used to find the perimeter
no
yes
I think so
The formula for the perimeter of a square is P equals 4 times a. 'P' represents the perimeter, and 'a' represents a side of the square.
The answer will depend on what information about the square you have: its perimeter, area, length of diagonal.
Yes. But using P=4s is easier with a square.
The length of a square is not determined by a formula, it is determined by measuring the square.
34 inches
If the side of the square is of length s then the perimeter is 4*s.
Perimeter of a square = 4 x (length of any one side)
The formula for the perimeter of a rectangle with length L and width W is P = 2*(L + W) In a square, the length and width are the same. So L = W And so A = 2*(L + L) = 2*(2L) = 4*L