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RectanglesSquaresParallelogramsTrapezoidsTrianglesRegular PolygonsCirclesSurface Area of a PyramidSurface Area of a CylinderThe Area Under an Function

Edited by Yoko Kanai, Tarabul, Krystle, Sahid Ali and 2 others

Area is a measurement of the amount of space inside a two-dimensional figure. Sometimes, finding area can be as simple as simply multiplying two numbers, but often times it can be more complicated. Read this article for a brief overview for the following shapes: quadrilaterals, triangles, circles, surface areas of pyramids and cylinders, and the area under an arc.

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EditMethod 1 of 10: Rectangles

  1. Find Area Step 1.jpg
    1
    Find the lengths of two consecutive sides of the rectangle. Because rectangles have two pairs of sides of equal length, label one side as the base (b) and one side as the height (h). Generally, the horizontal side is the base and the vertical side is the height.
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  2. Find Area Step 2.jpg
    2
    Multiply base times height to get the area. If the area of the rectangle is k, k=b*h. This means that the area is simply the product of the base and the height.

EditMethod 2 of 10: Squares

  1. Find Area Step 3.jpg
    1
    Find the length of a side of the square. Because squares have four equal sides, all of the sides should have this same measurement.
  2. Find Area Step 4.jpg
    2
    Square the length of the side. This is your area.
    • This works because a square is simply a special rectangle that has equal width and length. So, in solving k=b*h, b and h are both the same value. So, you end up squaring a single number in order to find the area.

EditMethod 3 of 10: Parallelograms

  1. Find Area Step 5.jpg
    1
    Choose one side to be the base of the parallelogram. Find the length of this base.
  2. Find Area Step 6.jpg
    2
    Draw a perpendicular line to this base, and determine the length of this line between where it crosses the base and the side opposite to the base. This length is the height
    • If the side opposite to the base is not long enough that the perpendicular line crosses it, extend the side along the line until it intersects the perpendicular line.
  3. Find Area Step 7.jpg
    3
    Plug the base and height into the equation k=b*h

EditMethod 4 of 10: Trapezoids

  1. Find Area Step 8.jpg
    1
    Find the lengths of the two parallel sides. Assign these values to variables a and b.
  2. Find Area Step 9.jpg
    2
    Find the height. Draw a parallel line that crosses both parallel sides, and the length of the line segment on this line connecting the two sides is the height of the parallelogram (h).
  3. Find Area Step 10.jpg
    3
    Plug these values into the formula A=0.5(a+b)h

EditMethod 5 of 10: Triangles

  1. Find Area Step 11.jpg
    1
    Find the base and height of the triangle. This is the length of one side of the triangle (the base), and the length of the line segment perpendicular to the base connecting the base to the opposite vertex of the triangle.
  2. Find Area Step 12.jpg
    2
    To find the area, plug the base and height values into the equation A=0.5b*h

EditMethod 6 of 10: Regular Polygons

  1. Find Area Step 13.jpg
    1
    Find the length of a side and the length of the apothem (the line segment perpendicular to a side connecting the middle of a side to the center. The length of the apothem will be assigned the variable a.
  2. Find Area Step 14.jpg
    2
    Multiply the length of the side by the number of sides to get the perimeter of the polygon (p).
  3. Find Area Step 15.jpg
    3
    Plug these values into the equation A=0.5a*p

EditMethod 7 of 10: Circles

  1. Find Area Step 16.jpg
    1
    Find the radius of the circle (r). This is a line segment connecting the center to a point on the circle. By definition, this value is the same no matter what point you pick on the circle.
  2. Find Area Step 17.jpg
    2
    Plug the radius into the equation A=πr^2

EditMethod 8 of 10: Surface Area of a Pyramid

  1. Find Area Step 18.jpg
    1
    Find the area of the base rectangle by using the formula shown above for finding the area of a rectangle: k=b*h
  2. Find Area Step 19.jpg
    2
    Find the area of each side triangle by using the formula shown above for finding the area of a triangle:A=0.5b*h.
  3. Find Area Step 20.jpg
    3
    Add up all the areas: the base and all the sides.

EditMethod 9 of 10: Surface Area of a Cylinder

  1. Find Area Step 21.jpg
    1
    Find the radius of one of the base circles.
  2. Find Area Step 22.jpg
    2
    Find the height of the cylinder
  3. Find Area Step 23.jpg
    3
    Find the area of the bases using the formula of the area of a circle: A=πr^2
  4. Find Area Step 24.jpg
    4
    Find the area of the side by multiplying the height of the cylinder by the perimeter of the base. The perimeter of a circle is P=2πr, so the area of the side is A=2πhr
  5. Find Area Step 25.jpg
    5
    Add up all the areas: the two identical circular bases and the side. So, the surface area should be SA=2πr^2+2πhr.

EditMethod 10 of 10: The Area Under an Function

Say you want to find the area under a curve and above the x-axis modeled by function f(x) in the domain interval x within [a,b]. This method requires knowledge of integral calculus. If you have not taken an introductory calculus course, this method may not make any sense.

  1. Find Area Step 26.jpg
    1
    Define f(x) in terms of x.
  2. Find Area Step 27.jpg
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    Take the integral of f(x) within [a,b]. By the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus, given F(x)=∫f(x), ∫abf(x) = F(b)—F(a).
  3. 3
    Plug in the a and b values into the integral expression. The area under f(x) between x [a,b] is defined as ∫abf(x). So, A=F(b))—F(a).

    Find Area Step 28.jpg
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Article Info

Categories: Calculating Volume and Area

Recent edits by: Jasonryf, Sahid Ali, Krystle

In other languages:

Italiano: Come Calcolare l'Area, Español: Cómo calcular área, Deutsch: Flächen berechnen, 中文: 得出面积, Русский: найти площадь, Français: Comment calculer la surface d’une figure géométrique

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