Geometry Calculator
Calculate properties of circles, triangles, and rectangles
Enter radius to compute area, circumference, and diameter
Area = pi x r2, Circumference = 2 x pi x rWhat is a Geometry Calculator?
A Geometry Calculator is a math tool that helps you calculate common geometric measurements such as area, perimeter, circumference, surface area, volume, and missing side lengths. Geometry focuses on shapes and space—like circles, triangles, rectangles, and 3D objects such as cylinders and spheres.
Instead of memorizing multiple formulas and doing the arithmetic by hand, a geometry calculator lets you enter the measurements you already know (like radius, length, width, base, height, or side lengths) and instantly computes the result. This is useful for students learning geometry, as well as real-world tasks like home projects, construction planning, packaging, landscaping, and design.
Many geometry problems are simple in concept but easy to mess up with unit conversions or formula mistakes. A calculator reduces errors and saves time, especially when working with decimals, large measurements, or multiple shapes.
How to Use This Geometry Calculator
- Choose the shape or calculation type -- example: circle area, rectangle perimeter, triangle area, cylinder volume
- Enter the required measurements -- such as radius, side lengths, base, height, length, width
- Select units if supported -- cm, inches, feet, meters, etc.
- Click "Calculate" -- to compute the result
- Review the output -- check that the unit makes sense (square units for area, cubic units for volume)
Tips:
- Use consistent units for all inputs (don't mix inches and feet unless you convert first)
- Area results are in square units (e.g., ft²), and volume results are in cubic units (e.g., ft³)
- If your result seems too large or too small, double-check the inputs—most errors come from entering the wrong unit or swapping height/width
Geometry Formulas
2D Shapes (Area and Perimeter)
Rectangle
- Area = length x width
- Perimeter = 2(length + width)
Square
- Area = side²
- Perimeter = 4 × side
Triangle
- Area = (base × height) ÷ 2
- Perimeter = side1 + side2 + side3
Circle
- Area = πr²
- Circumference = 2πr
Where r = radius and π ≈ 3.14159
Right Triangle (Pythagorean Theorem)
a² + b² = c²
Where c is the hypotenuse (the longest side)
3D Shapes (Surface Area and Volume)
Rectangular Prism (Box)
- Volume = length × width × height
- Surface Area = 2(lw + lh + wh)
Cylinder
- Volume = πr²h
- Surface Area = 2πr² + 2πrh
Sphere
- Volume = (4/3)πr³
- Surface Area = 4πr²
Example Calculations
Example 1: Area of a Circle
Radius (r): 7
Formula: Area = πr²
Calculation: π × 7² = π × 49 ≈ 153.94
Result: Area ≈ 153.94 square units
Example 2: Perimeter of a Rectangle
Length: 12, Width: 8
Formula: Perimeter = 2(length + width)
Calculation: 2(12 + 8) = 2 × 20 = 40
Result: Perimeter = 40 units
Example 3: Area of a Triangle
Base: 10, Height: 6
Formula: Area = (base × height) ÷ 2
Calculation: (10 × 6) ÷ 2 = 60 ÷ 2 = 30
Result: Area = 30 square units
Example 4: Volume of a Cylinder
Radius (r): 3, Height (h): 10
Formula: Volume = πr²h
Calculation: π × 3² × 10 = π × 9 × 10 = 90π ≈ 282.74
Result: Volume ≈ 282.74 cubic units
Frequently Asked Questions
What's the difference between perimeter and area?
Perimeter is the distance around a 2D shape (measured in units like cm or inches). Area is the space inside a 2D shape (measured in square units like cm² or in²).
Why do circle formulas use π (pi)?
π is the constant ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter. It appears in circle formulas because circles are defined by that constant relationship. A common approximation is π ≈ 3.14159.
What units should I use for geometry calculations?
Use consistent units for all inputs. If you measure length in inches, keep all values in inches. The output will follow the same unit system (square inches for area, cubic inches for volume).
How do I calculate a missing side in a right triangle?
Use the Pythagorean theorem: a² + b² = c². If you know two sides, you can solve for the third by rearranging the equation.
Why is my area or volume result "too big"?
The most common causes are entering values in the wrong unit (feet vs inches), mixing units without converting, or confusing radius with diameter (diameter is twice the radius).
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