To calculate the cost per square foot of a counter that costs $100 per linear foot, you need to know the depth of the counter. Assuming a standard depth of 2 feet, the cost per square foot would be $100 divided by 2, resulting in $50 per square foot. If the depth is different, you would adjust the calculation accordingly.
To determine the linear feet from square feet, you need to know the width of the area. If, for example, the width is 10 feet, you would divide 350 square feet by 10 feet, resulting in 35 linear feet. The formula is Linear Feet = Square Feet ÷ Width. Without knowing the width, you can't calculate the linear feet.
Divide the square footage by the width in feet. Example: 20 sq. ft roll of material is made up of 10 linear feet by 2 feet in width. 20 square feet divided by 2 feet wide equals 10 linear feet and 2 feet wide. For linear feet ask yourself how long is it. 100 sq. ft. 1 foot wide would be 100 linear feet long.
Square feet (sq. ft.) measures area, while feet measure length. Therefore, 4,000 square feet refers to an area, not a linear measurement. To find a linear dimension, you would need to know one side's length. For example, if you have a square, each side would be approximately 63.25 feet long, since the square root of 4,000 is about 63.25.
To frame a space of 240 square feet, you'll need to calculate the perimeter and the amount of framing required. Assuming standard wall height and no windows or doors, you can estimate that you will need approximately 1 linear foot of 2x4 for every square foot of wall area. This means you would need about 240 linear feet of 2x4. Since a standard 2x4 is 8 feet long, you would require around 30 pieces of 2x4 (240 ÷ 8 = 30).
get a calculator, take 3500 divided by 3 times 2.
This would be an unanswerable question as 80 linear feet is a linear unit and square yards is a measure of area. Now if the yard is 80 linear feet by 80 linear feet , that would be an area of 6400 square feet. Since 9 square feet occupy a square yard, that would be an area of 711 1/3 square yards. But, 80 linear feet is only a measure in one dimension and area is a two dimensional measure
100 Feet IS 100 Linear Feet. If you wanted to know how many linear feet would give you 100 square feet, you would take the square root of 100, which is 10... SO a 10 x 10 linear foot area would be 100 square feet, and a 100 x 100 Linear foot area would be 10,000 square feet.
chances are the rate is based on a standard 24" countertop so I would double the linear foot price making the total $16,200.
A square can be as big as you wish to draw it. And a square would be measured in square units, not linear units.
A linear foot is a straight-line measurement, rather than a sqare-foot measurement. A 2x4 that is five feet long would be five linear feet. Moreover, since a square is measured by its perimeter, a 5x5 square would be 20 linear feet (5+5+5+5).By comparison, its area would be measured in square rather than in linear feet. Consequently, its area would be 25 square feet (5x5). If the square were cubed, then its area would be 125 cubic feet (5x5x5).Linear foot is a term used to describe a measurement. It basically means something is being measured in one straight line. A linear foot still measures 12 inches.
To convert linear meters to square meters, you need to know the width of the material in linear meters. If the width is 1 meter, then 1 linear meter equals 1 square meter. If the width is different, you would multiply the width by the linear meters to get the square meters (Square Meters = Width x Linear Meters).
Linear is a straight line measurement and square feet requires a length and width.
20 linear feet would be "length", 3 feet would be width. To get square feet, multiply length by width.
That is relatively easy, you would take the equation Linear Foot=Length then mutitply the length by the cost per linear foot. Therefore you already have measured 6 foot plus 9 foot that equals 15 feet in length, you then multiply that number 15 x 150 (price per linear foot) which would give you 2250. The depth does not matter just the length when you measure linear feet. Hmmm. If the counter is L-shaped, I would think you have to take into consideration that the width (4 ft) of the counter would come into play. If the 6 ft section is the front of the counter, then it would take an additional 4 ft to meet the back corner of the 9 ft section ( or vice-versa). I thiink you need to add the 4 ft to the 15 ft to get a better estimate. Hence, 19 X 150 = 2850.
To determine the linear feet from square feet, you need to know the width of the area. If, for example, the width is 10 feet, you would divide 350 square feet by 10 feet, resulting in 35 linear feet. The formula is Linear Feet = Square Feet ÷ Width. Without knowing the width, you can't calculate the linear feet.
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To convert square feet to linear feet, you need to know the width of the area you're measuring. Divide the total square footage by the width in feet to get the linear footage. For example, if you have 100 square feet of flooring and the width is 10 feet, you would calculate 100 ÷ 10 = 10 linear feet.