What will the radius of your cake be?
This is a problem of geometry. Given that the cake is circular, the greater the cake the greater the radius of it. So, as shown in the figure 1, the radius will be the distance from the center to any extreme point of the circle.
How many slices will you be able to cut?
The total area of a circle is given by:

We need to fin how many slices will be cut, so let's calculate the area of the circular sector which can be obtained simply applying rule of three, so:

Let's name n the number of slices, if we divide the total area by n this result, each area must equal, then:

Finally, we will be able to cut:

Slices
Answer:
its b cus hit dat hommie
Step-by-step explanation:
What we know: A dozen costs 1.32; there are 12 in a dozen.
What we need to know: How much a restaurant makes selling 1 egg at 0.99.
First, find the value of one egg; you can do that by dividing the total cost (1.32) by the amount (12):
1.32 / 12 = 0.11 <-- The cost per egg is 11 cents. To find the profit of the restaurant, just subtract the cost from the price they sell it for:
0.99 - 0.11 = 0.88 <-- The profit the restaurant makes per egg is 88 cents.
Hope this helps.
False beacause 2/3 is bigger than 11/12. Think about it like pizza 2/3 pieces is better cuz there bigger & 11/12 are smaller pieces.
When it is in () it means multiply x=45