Obviously there is more than one way to do this.
VL = Ldi/dt Volts has units of Joules/Coulomb: J/C i has units of Coulombs/second: C/s
So di/di is C/s^2 L has units of J/C / C/s^2 = Js^2/C^2
Ic = CdV/dt => Ic/dV/dt = C/s / J/C-s = C/s * C-s/J = C^2/J C has units of C^2/J OR you could just type Q = CV => C = Q/V = C/J/C = C^2/J same answer
R = V/I => J/C / C/s = J-s/C^2
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(S-C)/C
Where S is Selling Price and C is Cost.
Not to be confused with Gross Profit which is (S-C)/S
100% Markup = 50% Gross Profit
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It is sqrt{s*(s-a)*(s-b)*(s-c)} where the lengths of the three sides are a, b and c units and s = (a+b+c)/2.
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C. C. S. Wilmer has written:
'Buitens binnen Utrecht' -- subject(s): Country homes, Manors
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C. S. S. Higham has written:
'History of the British empire'
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c cold weather
s standard
C = Comfort ride
S = Sport ride (tighter, faster)
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S-C. C. Chiu has written:
'Southern Appalachian regional seismic network' -- subject(s): Seismological stations, Seismology
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Least to most polar: C-Cl in CCl4 < C-S in CS2 < C-O in OCl2 < S-F in SF6.
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Use the Hero's formula: Let s = (a + b + c)/2. Then the area of the triangle equals
√[s(s - a)(s - b)(s - c)], where a, b, and c denote the sides of the triangle.
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Let the sides be a, b, c
Area = sq rt [s(s-a)(s-b)(s-c)]
where s= 1/2 (a+b+c)
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Suppose the sides are a, b and c units.
Calculate s= (a+b+c)/2
Then Area = sqrt[s*(s-a)*(s-b)*(s-c)] square units
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The answer depends on the information that you do have.
Suppose you know all the edge lengths: the three sides of the triangle are a, b and c and the length of the prism is d.
Let s = (a + b + c)/2
Then the area of the triangular cross section is sqrt[s*(s-a)*(s-b)*(s-c)] square units.
So, surface area = 2*sqrt[s*(s-a)*(s-b)*(s-c)] + d*(a+b+c) square units.
Volume = sqrt[s*(s-a)*(s-b)*(s-c)]*d cubic units.
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Stephen C. Dewhurst has written:
'Programming in C[plus plus]' -- subject(s): C++ (Computer program language), C
'C++ common knowledge' -- subject(s): C++ (Computer program language)
'Programmer en C++' -- subject(s): C (Langage de programmation)
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S. C. Mercer has written:
'The two Kentuckians' -- subject(s): Poetry
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C. S. Engelbrecht has written:
'School-leavers' -- subject(s): Dropouts
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C.-S. has written:
'Menippeus rusticus' -- subject(s): Politics and government, Poetry
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Let A,B,C,D Four different sides with different lengths. Apply the following formula.
A = Sqrt ( ( s-a) ( s-b) (s-c) (s-c) )
Where S = ( a+b+c+d) / 2.
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120 sq metres.
To see how you get this answer, read on:
If the sides are a, b and c, then calculate s = 0.5*(a+b+c)
Then the area is sqrt[s*(s-a)*(s-b)*(s-c)]
1 answer