Answer:
hmm... A is the answer but if anything comes up tell me
So the best I could come up with is paper-rock-scissors; the operation takes two inputs and puts out the winner (assuming they are different).
So (paper rock) scissors= paper scissors = scissors,
But paper (rock scissors)= paper rock = paper.
This is a good example because it shows that associativity matters even outside of math.
Given:
hexagon
apothem of the hexagon: 14 cm
perimeter of the hexagon: 96 cm
Area of the hexagon = [(3√3) / 2] a² ; where a is the measure of the side
hexagon has 6 sides.
Perimeter = 6a
96 cm = 6a
96 cm / 6 = a
16 = a
We can also use the area of a triangle to approximate the area of the hexagon. There are 6 triangles in the hexagon .
Area of a triangle = (height * base) / 2
A = (14 cm * 16 cm) / 2
A = 224 / 2
A = 112 cm²
112 cm² * 6 triangles = 672 cm²