Perimeter of Polygons
Add all outer sides — and find missing lengths in composite shapes first.
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A square has a perimeter of 36 cm. What is its side length? Now imagine the same perimeter but shaped as a rectangle that is twice as long as it is wide. What are its dimensions?
Perimeter is the total distance around the outside of a shape — add every outer side length. For composite shapes, use opposite-side relationships to find any missing lengths before adding.
Trace the boundary of the shape with your finger. Every side you cross gets added. For L-shapes and step shapes, some sides are not given — find them first using opposite sides equal the total rule before adding all sides together.
Know
- Perimeter = sum of all outer side lengths
- Regular polygon formula: $P = n \times s$
- Rectangle formula: $P = 2l + 2w$
Understand
- How opposite-side relationships reveal missing lengths in L-shapes
- How to work backwards from perimeter to find an unknown side
Can Do
- Find the perimeter of regular polygons, rectangles and composites
- Calculate missing side lengths in L-shaped figures
- Find an unknown side given the perimeter and other sides
Wrong: For an L-shape, adding only the 4 labelled sides and ignoring the 2 missing sides.
Right: Find missing sides first using the opposite-sides rule, then add all 6 sides.
Wrong: Rectangle perimeter $= l + w = 15 + 8 = 23$ m.
Right: $P = 2l + 2w = 2(15) + 2(8) = 46$ m — there are two of each side!
In a regular polygon, all sides are equal. Perimeter $= n \times s$, where $n$ is the number of sides and $s$ is the side length.
Examples:
- Equilateral triangle ($n=3$, $s=7$): $P = 3 \times 7 = 21$ cm
- Square ($n=4$, $s=9$): $P = 4 \times 9 = 36$ cm
- Regular hexagon ($n=6$, $s=8$): $P = 6 \times 8 = 48$ cm
- Regular octagon ($n=8$, $s=5$): $P = 8 \times 5 = 40$ cm
Reverse: if $P$ and $n$ are known, $s = P \div n$.
Trace the boundary of an L-shape — you will find 6 sides. Two are usually unlabelled; use the opposite-sides rule to find them before adding.
Opposite-sides rule:
- Missing horizontal $=$ total width $-$ partial width
- Missing vertical $=$ total height $-$ partial height
Then: $P = $ sum of all 6 sides.
Apply the opposite-sides rule: sides facing each other (and parallel) must account for the full length of the shape in that direction.
For an L-shape with total width 15 cm and a notch 9 cm wide, and total height 12 cm with a notch 7 cm tall:
- Missing horizontal $= 15 - 9 = 6$ cm
- Missing vertical $= 12 - 7 = 5$ cm
$P = 12 + 15 + 5 + 9 + 7 + 6 = 54$ cm
If you know the perimeter and some sides, find an unknown side by subtracting the known sides from the perimeter.
Rectangle example: $P = 46$ m, $l = 15$ m. Find $w$.
- $P = 2l + 2w$
- $46 = 2(15) + 2w = 30 + 2w$
- $2w = 46 - 30 = 16$
- $w = 8$ m
Or: half-perimeter method: $\frac{P}{2} = l + w$, so $w = \frac{P}{2} - l = 23 - 15 = 8$ m.
Perimeter Formulas
- Any polygon: $P = $ sum of sides
- Regular: $P = n \times s$
- Rectangle: $P = 2l + 2w$
- Square: $P = 4s$
Composite Shapes
- Trace the boundary
- Count all sides (L-shape = 6)
- Missing $h =$ total $-$ partial
- Missing $v =$ total $-$ partial
Working Backwards
- $P = 2l + 2w$
- $l + w = P \div 2$
- Unknown $= (P \div 2) - $ known
Check
- Did you count every side?
- Did you double for rectangles?
- Did you find missing sides first?
How are you completing this lesson?
Watch Me Solve It · 3 examples
- 1Identify $n$ and $s$$n = 6$ (hexagon), $s = 8$ cmA regular hexagon has 6 equal sides.
- 2Apply the formula$P = n \times s = 6 \times 8$
- 3Calculate$P = 48$ cmSix equal sides of 8 cm each — simple multiplication.
- 1Find missing sidesMissing horizontal $= 15 - 9 = 6$ cm; Missing vertical $= 12 - 7 = 5$ cmThe two missing sides complete the L-shape boundary.
- 2List all 6 sides12, 15, 5, 9, 7, 6 (all in cm)
- 3Add all sides$P = 12 + 15 + 5 + 9 + 7 + 6 = 54$ cmAll 6 outer sides traced and summed.
- 1Write the formula$P = 2l + 2w$A rectangle has two lengths and two widths.
- 2Substitute and simplify$46 = 2(15) + 2w = 30 + 2w$, so $2w = 16$
- 3Solve for $w$$w = 8$ mCheck: $2(15) + 2(8) = 30 + 16 = 46$ m ✓
Brain Trainer · 4 problems
Find the perimeter or missing side for each problem. Work it, then reveal the answer.
1 Equilateral triangle, $s = 7$ cm. Perimeter?
$P = 3 \times 7 =$ 21 cm2 Rectangle $P = 56$ cm, $l = 18$ cm. Find $w$.
$w = (56 \div 2) - 18 = 28 - 18 =$ 10 cm3 Regular hexagon $P = 60$ cm. Find the side length.
$s = 60 \div 6 =$ 10 cm4 $P = 44$ m, $l = 14$ m. Find $w$ for a rectangle.
$w = (44 \div 2) - 14 = 22 - 14 =$ 8 m
Quick Check · 5 questions
Show Your Working · 3 questions
Q6. A pentagon has sides 8 cm, 7 cm, 6 cm, 9 cm and 5 cm. Find the perimeter and state whether this is a regular pentagon.
Q7. A square has a perimeter of 28 m. Find its side length and then calculate its area.
Q8. A square and a rectangle have the same perimeter. The square has side 20 m. The rectangle has length 25 m. (a) Find the perimeter. (b) Find the rectangle's width. (c) Compare the two areas — which is larger?
Quick Check
1. C — $P = 3 \times 7 = 21$ cm.
2. B — $w = 28 - 18 = 10$ cm.
3. A — $s = 60 \div 6 = 10$ cm.
4. C — Missing sides: $10-4=6$, $8-3=5$. $P = 8+10+5+4+3+6 = 36$ cm.
5. B — $w = 22 - 14 = 8$ m.
Model Answers
Q6 (3 marks): $P = 8+7+6+9+5 = 35$ cm. Not regular — the sides are not all equal.
Q7 (2 marks): Side $= 28 \div 4 = 7$ m. Area $= 7^2 = 49$ m².
Q8 (4 marks): (a) $P = 4 \times 20 = 80$ m. (b) $w = 80/2 - 25 = 40 - 25 = 15$ m. (c) Square area $= 20^2 = 400$ m². Rectangle area $= 25 \times 15 = 375$ m². The square has the larger area.
Regular Octagon Deep Dive
A regular octagon has a perimeter of 64 cm. (a) Find the side length. (b) The apothem (distance from centre to the middle of a side) of a regular octagon is approximately $1.207 \times s$. Find the apothem to 2 decimal places. (c) If you were to fence this octagonal garden, how many full metres of fencing do you need to buy?
Reveal solution
(a) $s = 64 \div 8 = 8$ cm. (b) Apothem $= 1.207 \times 8 = 9.656 \approx 9.66$ cm. (c) Perimeter $= 64$ cm $= 0.64$ m, so 1 full metre of fencing is needed.
$P = $ sum of sides
Add every outer side — don't skip any.
Regular: $P = n \times s$
All sides equal — multiply the side length by the number of sides.
Rectangle: $P = 2l + 2w$
Two lengths plus two widths — always double both dimensions.
Composite shapes
Trace the boundary, count 6 sides for L-shapes, find missing sides before adding.
Missing sides
Missing $=$ total $-$ partial, using the opposite-sides rule.
Working backwards
$w = \frac{P}{2} - l$ for rectangles. Subtract known sides from half-perimeter.
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