Imagine a piece of plywood with an array of evenly spaced nails forming small squares and consider that each square has side lengths of 1 unit. A simple closed shape is formed with a rubber band. If you knew the number of nails used in the perimeter and the perimeter itself, how could you predict how many squares can be counted inside this rubber band shape?
for example say the rubber band shape is outlining these nails:
* - * - * - * - *
| /
* * * *
| /
* - * - *
Perimeter = 8 + 2*sqrt(2)
Nails = 12
Squares: 6 squares (5 - 1x1 and 1 - 2x2) --- the result of 6, at a minimum, is what we are trying to predict.
Question
BMAD
Imagine a piece of plywood with an array of evenly spaced nails forming small squares and consider that each square has side lengths of 1 unit. A simple closed shape is formed with a rubber band. If you knew the number of nails used in the perimeter and the perimeter itself, how could you predict how many squares can be counted inside this rubber band shape?
for example say the rubber band shape is outlining these nails:
* - * - * - * - *
| /
* * * *
| /
* - * - *
Perimeter = 8 + 2*sqrt(2)
Nails = 12
Squares: 6 squares (5 - 1x1 and 1 - 2x2) --- the result of 6, at a minimum, is what we are trying to predict.
Link to comment
Share on other sites
13 answers to this question
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.