Generate a step-by-step solution for a rectangle's area from length and width, or for a missing side from a known area, with the result verified.
You are a careful geometry tutor who never mixes up area with perimeter, because both use the same two measurements, length and width, and answering the wrong one is the most common way this kind of problem loses points even when the arithmetic itself is correct. Work in [MODE:select:solve for area,solve for a missing side,explain the formula with a worked example] mode. My length is [LENGTH?] and my width is [WIDTH?]. If you only gave me one side and told me the shape is a square, note that plainly and use that single value for both dimensions instead of asking me to repeat it. Before calculating anything, confirm both the length and the width are positive numbers, since a rectangle can't have a zero or negative side. If I chose solve for area, write A = length × width with my two values substituted in, and show that multiplication as its own explicit step. State the final area in square units matching whatever length unit you were given, and say plainly that this is a squared unit describing the flat space inside the rectangle, not the distance around its edge. Then verify by dividing your area by the length and confirming you land back on the original width, or dividing by the width to confirm you land back on the original length. If that check fails, trace back through the multiplication to find where the error happened and redo that step instead of adjusting the final number to make it fit. If I chose solve for a missing side, use the area I provide in [KNOWN_AREA?] alongside whichever one of [LENGTH] or [WIDTH] I did give you, and isolate the missing side as area divided by the known side. Show that division as its own step. Verify by multiplying your answer by the known side and confirming it reproduces the area I started with. If I chose explain the formula with a worked example, use my length and width as the example if they're both real positive numbers, or fall back to a length of 8 and a width of 5 if I left them blank, and say plainly which one you picked. Explain in one plain sentence that a rectangle's area counts how many one-by-one unit squares fit inside it, which is exactly what multiplying the two side lengths together does, arranging that many rows of that many squares each. Then solve the example using the identical step-by-step and verification discipline described above, so the explanation and the worked proof of it match. If I ask for the perimeter instead of the area, say so plainly and use P = 2(length + width), adding the two sides and doubling instead of multiplying them, rather than silently answering the area question you didn't ask.
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Get Early AccessRectangle area is the simplest formula in geometry, length times width, and the mistakes that happen with it aren't usually arithmetic. They're mixing up area with perimeter, since both use the exact same two measurements and it's easy to double and add when a problem wanted a multiplication instead. This tool solves your own [LENGTH] and [WIDTH] for area specifically, and if you ask it for perimeter instead, it flags the difference and uses the correct formula rather than quietly answering the wrong question.
It shows the multiplication as its own visible step, states the result in square units with a plain note about what that unit measures, and verifies every answer by dividing back through to confirm it reproduces one of your original two sides.
Solve for a missing side works backward from a known area and one known side. Explain the formula with a worked example shows the unit-square intuition behind why multiplying two sides gives you an area, arranging rows of unit squares, using a clean 8-by-5 example.
Run it in the Dock Editor to keep a running log of every shape you solve, or pair it with the square area solver once a problem narrows down to the special case where every side matches. Tilt the sides and drop the right angles and the same base-times-height logic still applies, which the parallelogram area solver covers directly.
Fire up the Dock Editor, Claude, Gemini, or ChatGPT to get started. Set [MODE] to solve for area, solve for a missing side, or explain the formula with a worked example.
Fill in [LENGTH] and [WIDTH]. If the shape is a square instead, one value works for both sides.
The output shows length times width as its own explicit line before stating the final area.
Every area is divided back through one of the original sides to confirm it reproduces the other side you started with.
Have an area and only one side? Switch to solve for a missing side and supply [KNOWN_AREA].
Paste your homework's length and width into solve for area and check the multiplication step against your own worked answer.
Run rectangle problems from an SAT, ACT, or GED review packet through this tool to practice telling area and perimeter questions apart before choosing a formula.
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Generate a model answer key that isolates the area-versus-perimeter distinction where most points get lost on this kind of problem.
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