width in feet multiplied by length in feet multiplied by depth in feet (4" = .333 , 6" = .5) and divide by 27 (cubic feet in a yard)
for instance, the equation for a 10 x 10 slab 4 inches deep would be:
10'x10'x.333 divided by 27 = 1.23 cubic yards
hope this helps!
The standard of conic section by linear is the second order polynomial equation. This is taught in math.
I could not figure out the math equation. The new data did not fit the existing equation. An equation can be a math formula or standard method.
A peck is a dry measure of 8 quarts; the fourth part of a bushel, equal to 537.6 cubic inches (8.81 liters).
I think you are referring to checking a math equation. After you solve an equation you should go back and check your work to make sure you got the right answer. You can do this by plugging your answer back into the equation
you can not solve a science equation with out math
A*a + b*b = c*c
Concrete weighs about 150 pounds per cubic foot. Can't do the math but that is about 4500 pounds.
That IS the math problem - the question how many cubic centimeters are in a cubic meter.
Volume = length * Width * Heigth
The standard of conic section by linear is the second order polynomial equation. This is taught in math.
I could not figure out the math equation. The new data did not fit the existing equation. An equation can be a math formula or standard method.
A peck is a dry measure of 8 quarts; the fourth part of a bushel, equal to 537.6 cubic inches (8.81 liters).
Assuming you mean 1,000 square feet, the math works like this. Concrete is typically measured in cubic yards. A cubic yard is 3ft X 3ft x 3ft OR 27 cubic feet. Your volume of concrete would be 1000 x (5/12) = 416.6 cu.ft. / 27 cuft = 15.4 yards of concrete. Be sure to account for waste, slope (which may thicken your slab), etc.
math
to do a equation
Never Ending Math Equation was created on 1998-05-05.
variable equation solve it test it