Yes. The three dimensions are length, breadth ( or width) and height.
The breadth of the box refers to the measurement of the box from one side to the other side, typically considered as the width.
Length x Breadth x Height of the box
length by breadth by height in metres
Constructor overloading is similar to method overloading. You can overload constructors by changing the parameter list in the class definition. Here is an example public class Box{ private int height; private int width; private int breadth; // First constructor with no parameters Box(){ height = 0; width = 0; breadth = 0; } // This is the second overloaded constructor Box(int h,int w,int b){ height = h; width = w; breadth = h; } public void display(){ System.out.println("Height: "+height+" Width: "+width+" Breadth: "+breadth); } public static void main(String args[]){ Box obj = new Box(1,2,3); obj.display(); } }
Cubic inches in a box = volume of box (in cubic inches) = Length * Breadth * Height, where each of these three is given in inches.
You can't calculate the volume here as such the height is not mentioned here and for calculating volume you need height,breadth and length.
By adding all three sides (length, breadth and height) all-together we get the linear dimensions of a box.
It's simply the height x the width x the breadth of an object. For example - say a box measures 3 x 5 x 7 cm. The volume is 105 cm3
millimetres because if it is stored in a box the you mesaure the height breadth and length you get the answer
If it is a rectangular box, then volume = length*breadth*height, where each is measured in inches. If it is a cylindrical box, then pi*radius2*height, where the radius and height are measured in inches.
Opposite sides are parallel and it has a breadth and width of different lengths
breadth
Breathe or breadth?