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i have 1 answer 16cm x 9cm x 8cm = 1152cm
1152cm / 24 chunky chocs
thats the method you have to do

2007-01-08 06:07:58 · 7 answers · asked by apple 2 in Science & Mathematics Mathematics

7 answers

we need the three dimensions of the chunky choc unless it is 24cm3

2007-01-08 06:16:25 · answer #1 · answered by keefer 4 · 0 0

Since you only give the volume of the chocolates (24 cm^3, by the way, not just cm) and not the dimensions, there are basically infinite boxes that will meet this criteria. As long as the product of the length, width, and height is 1152 you could have any combination of side lengths.

i.e. 2*1*576; 3*1*384; 2*3*192, etc etc

Furthermore, it does not specify if the space has to be completely filled or not. If the candy was spherical, you could put it in an appropriately sized hat box (cylindrical) or a pyramid, or any other shaped "box".

2007-01-08 14:14:42 · answer #2 · answered by hunneebee22 4 · 0 0

With the present information you cannot get the exact dimensions. You don't give the exact dimensions of the chunky choc or how they are layed out in the box. 1 layer deep? 6 layers deep? How may chocs wide?

You'll need to develop this question further.

2007-01-08 14:31:05 · answer #3 · answered by thomas 7 · 0 0

I believe you need all the dimensions of one chunky choc before you can answer the question...or is each one 24cm^3?

2007-01-08 14:14:01 · answer #4 · answered by Sharon A 1 · 0 0

24cm x 24cm = 1152cm = (24cm squared)
you have 48 chunks
Think of a box
24 across and 24 down

2007-01-08 14:22:43 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

you mean each choc. has a volume of 24 cubic cm presumably?
so answer would be 24x48= 1152 cubic cm.

2007-01-08 14:14:20 · answer #6 · answered by Clint 6 · 0 0

I'm not that bothered how big it is. How much will it cost to be delivered

2007-01-12 13:53:10 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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