there is no " weight " on a rectangle.
if you mean WIDTH: Keeping in mind that the formula to find an Area of a Rectangle as follow: A= LW ,where A: Area in Square Units, L:Length , W: Width
Answer: W=A/L
yes their is a "weight" to a rectangle. The formula is W=V(volume)xWD(weight density)
A rectangle is a two dimensional object: height, width and length are three dimensions.
length is base and height is width
Divide the width by the length: width -------- height
A rectangle has only two dimensions, for example, length and width. The longest side is usually called the length, the other side, the width.
A rectangle has only two dimensions, for example, length and width. If you multiply that, you get the area. A rectangular box has a length, width, and height. If you multiply all three, you get the volume.
Length and Width (or Height)
Volume
length x width x height or length x breadth x height
multiply length times height times width
Height = Area divided by Length
A rectangle is a two dimensional object, with length and width but not height. An object with length, width and height could be a cuboid, in which case is it still the area that is required or the volume?
The formula for the volume of a rectangle is length x width x height. The area i just length x width