Respuesta :
The equation relating length to width
L = 3W
The inequality stating the boundaries of the perimeter
LW <= 112
When you plug in what L equals in the first equation into the second equation, you get
3W * W <= 112
evaluate
3W^2 <= 112
3W <= [tex]4 \sqrt{7} [/tex]
W <= [tex] \frac{4 \sqrt{7} }{3} [/tex] cm
L = 3W
The inequality stating the boundaries of the perimeter
LW <= 112
When you plug in what L equals in the first equation into the second equation, you get
3W * W <= 112
evaluate
3W^2 <= 112
3W <= [tex]4 \sqrt{7} [/tex]
W <= [tex] \frac{4 \sqrt{7} }{3} [/tex] cm
Answer:
the answer is 2w+2*(3w)≤112
Step-by-step explanation:
If the rectangle is three times the width and the perimeter is 112 cm then we do 2w+2*(3w)≤112 since it is bigger or the same as 112
btw the other guy is so wrong