The Decomposition Strategy for Composite Figures
The strategy:
- Identify the simpler shapes inside the figure
- Compute each sub-area using known formulas
- Add or subtract to get the total area
Composite shapes = simpler shapes combined (or cut apart)
Example 1: L-Shaped Floor Plan
Overall: 10 m × 8 m; corner removed: 4 m × 3 m
Example 1: Decompose and Calculate
Approach: Subtraction
- Large rectangle:
m² - Removed corner:
m²
Alternative: Split into two rectangles and add — same answer.
Example 2: Field with Semicircular Ends
Rectangle 50 m × 30 m plus two semicircular ends (diameter = 30 m)
Example 2: Decompose and Calculate
Rectangle + two semicircles = rectangle + one full circle:
Check In: Addition or Subtraction?
For each figure, decide: add or subtract?
| Figure | Approach? |
|---|---|
| L-shaped room | Subtract corner from rectangle |
| Field with semicircular ends | Add semicircles to rectangle |
| Window cut from a panel | ? |
| Patio with triangular alcove | ? |
Practice 1: Wall Panel Problem
A decorative wall panel is 3 m wide and 2 m tall. A circular window of diameter 0.8 m is cut from the center.
What is the painted area of the panel?
Hint: The circle is removed from the panel — which approach?
Practice 1: Wall Panel Answer Revealed
Panel area:
Circle area (radius = 0.4 m):
Painted area:
Practice 2: Composite Shape Problem
A composite figure consists of a rectangle 8 cm × 5 cm with a right triangle (base 8 cm, height 3 cm) attached to one end.
Find the total area of the composite figure.
Identify the two shapes, compute each area, then add.
Practice 2: Composite Shape Answer Revealed
Rectangle:
Triangle:
Total area:
Moving From 2D to 3D Figures
Composite 2D area: Break into simpler shapes, add/subtract ✓
Next: Volume of 3D prisms
The key insight: The rectangular prism formula
is a special case of a more general rule — one that works for any right prism.
Volume of Any Right Prism:
For any right prism:
= area of the base (any polygon) = height of the prism (distance between the two bases)
For rectangular prisms:
Base Height vs. Prism Height: A Critical Distinction
Base height: altitude of the triangular cross-section
Prism height: distance between the two triangular faces
Example 1: Rectangular Prism Confirms Formula
Dimensions: 5 cm × 4 cm × 3 cm
Step 1: Find base area
Step 2: Multiply by prism height
Same as
Example 2: Triangular Prism Volume Step by Step
Base height (6 in) ≠ prism height (8 in).
Check In: What Do You Need First?
To compute
- Base area
— 2D formula for the base shape - Prism height
— distance between the two bases
Find
Example 3: Trapezoidal Prism Volume Step by Step
Trapezoidal base: parallel sides 5 ft and 9 ft, trapezoid height 4 ft; prism height 7 ft
Step 1: Base area (trapezoid formula)
Step 2: Volume
Practice 3: Triangular Prism Volume
A triangular prism has a right-triangle base with legs 9 cm and 12 cm, and a prism height of 15 cm.
Find the volume. Show both steps.
Step 1: Find B. Step 2: Multiply by h.
Practice 3: Triangular Prism Answer Revealed
Step 1: Base area (right triangle)
Step 2: Volume
For a right triangle, the two legs are the base and height — no separate altitude needed.
Deck 1 Summary: Key Takeaways
| Concept | Rule |
|---|---|
| Composite area | Decompose → compute → add/subtract |
| Circle in composite | |
| Prism volume | |
| Heights | Base height ≠ prism height |
What Comes Next: Deck 2
Coming up:
- Surface area: nets, all faces,
for prisms - Slant height vs. vertical height for pyramids
- Choosing the right measure: area, surface area, or volume?
Prerequisite: Composite area and