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5.2: Perimeter and Area

  • Page ID
    219014
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    Measurement is one of the most practical branches of geometry. Whether you are buying flooring for a room, fencing a backyard, or designing a garden, the ability to measure and calculate the space around and inside a shape is an essential real-world skill. In this unit, you will learn how to find the perimeter of geometric figures — the total distance around the outside — and the area — the amount of space contained within.

    We will work with a variety of two-dimensional figures, building a toolkit of formulas that apply to shapes you encounter in everyday life. From rectangles and triangles to circles and composite figures, each shape has its own set of properties that guide how we measure it. Along the way, you will notice that the number pi appears whenever circles are involved, connecting the diameter of a circle to its circumference and area in a relationship that has fascinated mathematicians for centuries.

    Once you have those foundational skills in place, you will apply them to real-world problems involving two-dimensional figures. These applications will ask you to read carefully, identify the relevant shape and measurements, and choose the right formula to find a solution.

    Before diving in, enjoy the clip from Person of Interest below. In it, you will hear a memorable explanation of pi and the remarkable fact that its decimal expansion goes on forever — containing, within it, every number you could ever imagine. It is a fitting introduction to a unit where pi will play an important role.

    Explanation of Pi

    This clip from Person of Interest includes a memorable explanation of pi.


    5.2: Perimeter and Area is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.