Solve rectangle problems algebraically. Find missing dimensions from area, perimeter, or diagonal. Computes length, width, area, perimeter, diagonal, and aspect ratio with multiple solve modes.
A rectangle is one of the most fundamental shapes in geometry, yet solving for unknown dimensions involves a surprising variety of algebraic relationships. Given any two independent measurements — area and one side, perimeter and one side, diagonal and one side, or both sides directly — every other measurement can be computed. This generic rectangle calculator covers all these input combinations in a single tool.
Choose your solve mode to specify which pair of values you know, and let the calculator find everything else: length, width, area, perimeter, diagonal, aspect ratio, semi-perimeter, and the radius of the circumscribed circle. The formulas range from simple division (area ÷ side) to the Pythagorean theorem (diagonal from sides) to inverse Pythagorean calculations (side from diagonal and other side).
Visual comparison bars help you see the relative magnitudes of dimensions at a glance, and a complete properties table summarizes every computed value with its formula. A reference table of common rectangle ratios — golden rectangle, A-series paper, screen ratios — adds practical context for design and architecture applications. Eight presets let you explore standard problems without typing. Whether you are an algebra student, a designer working with aspect ratios, or an engineer sizing rectangular components, this calculator provides a quick, reliable solution for any rectangle problem.
Use this calculator when you know only part of a rectangle problem and need the rest of the measurements without switching between several formulas. Different geometry questions provide different givens, so being able to solve from area and one side, perimeter and one side, diagonal and one side, or both sides directly makes the tool more practical than a single-purpose rectangle formula.
It is useful for algebra practice, layout planning, packaging, framing, screen-ratio checks, and quick design estimates. Because the outputs include diagonal, aspect ratio, semi-perimeter, and circumradius, you can move from a partial description of the rectangle to a much fuller picture of its shape and scale.
Area = L × W. Perimeter = 2(L + W). Diagonal = √(L² + W²). Width from area: W = A / L. Width from perimeter: W = (P − 2L) / 2. Width from diagonal: W = √(d² − L²). Aspect Ratio = L / W. Circumradius = d / 2.
Result: Width = 6 units
In Area + Length mode, entering area 48 and length 8 gives width = 48 ÷ 8 = 6. From there the calculator finds perimeter = 28, diagonal = 10, aspect ratio ≈ 1.3333:1, and circumradius = 5. This is a good example of how one missing side unlocks every other rectangle property.
Rectangle problems are often presented backwards. Sometimes you know the area and one side, sometimes the perimeter and one side, and sometimes the diagonal with another dimension. Each case uses a different algebraic route, but they all lead to the same core measurements: length, width, area, perimeter, and diagonal. A multi-mode calculator is useful because it turns those different starting points into one consistent workflow instead of forcing you to remember a separate rearranged formula every time.
The diagonal is not just an extra output. It connects the rectangle to the Pythagorean theorem, determines the circumradius, and often appears in fabrication and layout checks where corner-to-corner clearance matters. Aspect ratio is equally important in design and display work because two rectangles can have very different proportions even when their areas are similar. Seeing those values alongside the side lengths helps distinguish shape from size.
Rectangle calculations show up in flooring estimates, sheet cutting, screen sizing, packaging design, frame construction, and room planning. In those tasks, you may know only a target area, a maximum perimeter, or a required diagonal span. Being able to reverse-solve the missing side quickly helps with budgeting, material planning, and fit checks. The common-ratios table also adds context by showing how your dimensions compare with standard proportions such as ISO paper, classic monitor formats, and the golden rectangle.
A generic rectangle is a rectangular area model used in algebra to represent multiplication of expressions. This calculator focuses on the geometric rectangle, computing dimensions and properties from known values.
Divide the area by the length: Width = Area ÷ Length. Use this as a practical reminder before finalizing the result.
No — area alone does not uniquely determine both sides. You need a second independent measurement like perimeter, diagonal, or one side.
It is the radius of the circle that passes through all four corners, equal to half the diagonal. Keep this note short and outcome-focused for reuse.
The diagonal connects opposite corners and is related to the sides by the Pythagorean theorem. It also determines the circumscribed circle.
The calculator returns no results. For example, if the perimeter is less than twice the given side, the other side would be negative, which is not geometrically valid.