List of formulas in elementary geometry

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This is a short list of some common mathematical shapes and figures and the formulas that describe them.

Two-dimensional shapes

Shape Area Perimeter/Circumference Meanings of symbols
Square l2 4l l is the length of a side
Rectangle lb 2(l+b) l is length, b is breadth
Circle πr2 2πr or πd where r is the radius and d is the diameter
Ellipse πab where a is the semimajor axis and b is the semiminor axis
Triangle bh2 a+b+c b is base; h is height; a,b,c are sides
Parallelogram bh 2(a+b) b is base, h is height, a is side
Trapezoid a+b2h a and b are the bases
Sources:[1][2][3]

Three-dimensional shapes

Illustration of the shapes' equation terms
Cube
Cuboid
Prism
Parallelepiped
Pyramids
Tetrahedron
Cone
Cylinder
Sphere
Ellipsoid

This is a list of volume formulas of basic shapes:[4](pp405–406)

  • Cone13πr2h, where r is the base's radius
  • Cubea3, where a is the side's length;
  • Cuboidabc, where a, b, and c are the sides' length;
  • Cylinderπr2h, where r is the base's radius and h is the cone's height;
  • Ellipsoid43πabc, where a, b, and c are the semi-major and semi-minor axes' length;
  • Sphere43πr3, where r is the radius;
  • ParallelepipedabcK, where a, b, and c are the sides' length,K=1+2cos(α)cos(β)cos(γ)cos2(α)cos2(β)cos2(γ), and α, β, and γ are angles between the two sides;
  • PrismBh, where B is the base's area and h is the prism's height;
  • Pyramid13Bh, where B is the base's area and h is the pyramid's height;
  • Tetrahedron212a3, where a is the side's length.

Sphere

The basic quantities describing a sphere (meaning a 2-sphere, a 2-dimensional surface inside 3-dimensional space) will be denoted by the following variables

Surface area:

S=4πr2=1πC2=π(6V)23

Volume:

V=43πr3=16π2C3=16πS3/2

Radius:

r=12πC=14πS=34πV3

Circumference:

C=2πr=πS=π26V3

See also

References