Resultaten

Rectangle Area — Counting the Grid

Animation coming — full Sora 2 prompt below. Video will replace this placeholder.

Plain English first

A rectangle is the simplest area to measure because you can just count.

Lay a grid of unit squares inside it. Count the columns. Count the rows. Multiply. That number is the area — the total count of unit squares that fit inside without overlapping or leaving gaps.

The formula A = l×w is not a rule someone made up. It's a shortcut for that counting. 4 columns of 5 squares each = 20 squares. Length times width equals total.

Every other area formula on this page is built on top of this one.


Standard math notation

A = l × w

Where:
  A = area (total unit squares inside the rectangle)
  l = length (number of columns of squares)
  w = width  (number of rows of squares)

Units: if l and w are in meters, A is in square meters (m²)

Verbose Python with descriptive names

def compute_rectangle_area(
    length_of_rectangle,
    width_of_rectangle
):
    """
    Area is the count of unit squares that tile the interior exactly.
    Columns of squares times rows of squares equals total squares inside.
    """
    number_of_columns_of_squares = length_of_rectangle
    number_of_rows_of_squares    = width_of_rectangle
    total_unit_squares_inside    = number_of_columns_of_squares * number_of_rows_of_squares
    return total_unit_squares_inside

area = compute_rectangle_area(
    length_of_rectangle=4,
    width_of_rectangle=5
)
print(f"Area: {area} square units")  # 20

# A square is a special rectangle where length equals width
def compute_square_area(side_length):
    return compute_rectangle_area(side_length, side_length)

print(compute_square_area(side_length=3))  # 9

Sora 2 video prompt

8-second animation. Split screen. Left: a white rectangle labeled l=4 and w=5.
Grid lines appear and 20 unit squares fill in column by column, each glowing
warm gold as it fills. A counter shows the total building to 20. Right: the
formula A = l×w animates — 4 columns × 5 rows = 20 — with grid squares
matching the left side. Both resolve simultaneously. Clean white background,
warm earth tones, educational textbook style.

Why this is the foundation

Every 2D area formula is either a rectangle or a transformation of one:

Shape Trick Formula
Parallelogram Slide the end off and reattach — still same grid A = bh
Triangle Cut a rectangle diagonally — exactly half A = ½bh
Trapezoid Average of two bases times height A = ½h(b₁+b₂)
Circle Grid squares fill the interior — π corrects for curved edges A = πr²

See also

Opmerkingen

Nog geen opmerkingen. Wees de eerste!


Opmerkingen worden gemodereerd en verschijnen na goedkeuring.