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CEUET MathematicsPerimeter, Area, Volume & Equation of a LineRevision Notes

Final-week revision notes for Perimeter, Area, Volume & Equation of a Line. If you have already studied the full chapter, this page is your go-to refresher before sitting the CEUET. Compact, high-yield, and aligned with what Centro Escolar University tests in the Mathematics subtest.

Exam context

For the Centro Escolar University Entrance Test, Centro Escolar University tests Mathematics under a "Core" label, with Perimeter, Area, Volume & Equation of a Line in the 6th slot across 9 chapters. CEUET candidates must clear the Competitive overall score cut on the 2026 paper, which draws about a meaningful share of Mathematics questions. Date to watch: Q3–Q4 2026.

Perimeter, Area, Volume & Equation of a Line - Revision notes

This chapter covers essential mensuration formulas (perimeter, area, volume) and linear equations - two topics that frequently appear together in UPCAT and other major Philippine entrance exams. Understanding these concepts is crucial as geometry problems often require setting up linear equations on coordinate planes.

Sections

Formulas

Example

Rectangle with length 8cm and width 5cm: P = 2(8 + 5) = 2(13) = 26cm

Formula

P = 2(l + w)

Variables

l = length, w = width

Application

Rectangle perimeter

Example

Square with side 7m: P = 4(7) = 28m

Formula

P = 4s

Variables

s = side length

Application

Square perimeter

Example

Triangle with sides 3cm, 4cm, 5cm: P = 3 + 4 + 5 = 12cm

Formula

P = a + b + c

Variables

a, b, c = side lengths

Application

Triangle perimeter

Example

Circle with radius 6cm: C = 2π(6) = 12π ≈ 37.68cm

Formula

C = 2πr or C = πd

Variables

r = radius, d = diameter

Application

Circle circumference

Exam Tips

  • Always check if measurements are in the same units before calculating
  • Draw and label diagrams to identify all boundaries clearly
  • For circles, remember π ≈ 3.14 for approximations

Key Points

  • Perimeter measures the total distance around the boundary of a shape
  • Always expressed in linear units (cm, m, ft) - never squared
  • For composite figures, add up all the outer boundaries
  • Circle perimeter is called circumference

Definitions

Term

Perimeter

Definition

The total distance around the outside of a two-dimensional shape

Importance

Essential for calculating fencing, borders, or any boundary measurements

Section Title

Perimeter - Distance Around Figures

Common Mistakes

  • Confusing perimeter with area - perimeter is LINEAR measurement
  • Forgetting to convert diameter to radius when using circle formulas
  • Not identifying all sides in composite figures

Formulas

Example

Rectangle 10m × 6m: A = 10 × 6 = 60m²

Formula

A = lw

Variables

l = length, w = width

Application

Rectangle area

Example

Square with side 9cm: A = 9² = 81cm²

Formula

A = s²

Variables

s = side length

Application

Square area

Example

Triangle with base 8cm and height 6cm: A = ½(8)(6) = 24cm²

Formula

A = ½bh

Variables

b = base, h = height (perpendicular to base)

Application

Triangle area

Example

Circle with radius 5m: A = π(5²) = 25π ≈ 78.54m²

Formula

A = πr²

Variables

r = radius

Application

Circle area

Example

Parallelogram with base 12cm and height 8cm: A = 12 × 8 = 96cm²

Formula

A = bh

Variables

b = base, h = height

Application

Parallelogram area

Example

Trapezoid with parallel sides 10cm and 6cm, height 4cm: A = ½(10 + 6)(4) = 32cm²

Formula

A = ½(b₁ + b₂)h

Variables

b₁, b₂ = parallel sides, h = height between them

Application

Trapezoid area

Exam Tips

  • Always identify the perpendicular height, not just any side
  • For circles, if given diameter, divide by 2 to get radius first
  • Label your diagram clearly to avoid confusion
  • Check if answer should be exact (with π) or approximate

Key Points

  • Area measures the amount of surface a shape covers
  • Always expressed in square units (cm², m², ft²)
  • For composite figures, break into familiar shapes and add/subtract areas
  • Height must be perpendicular to the base in area calculations

Definitions

Term

Area

Definition

The amount of space inside the boundary of a flat two-dimensional shape

Importance

Used for calculating paint coverage, flooring, land measurements

Term

Heron's Formula

Definition

A = √[s(s-a)(s-b)(s-c)] where s = (a+b+c)/2

Importance

Calculate triangle area when only three sides are known

Section Title

Area - Surface Coverage

Common Mistakes

  • Using slant height instead of perpendicular height
  • Forgetting to square the radius in circle area formula
  • Mixing up base and height in triangle calculations
  • Not converting diameter to radius

Formulas

Example

Cube with side 4cm: V = 4³ = 64cm³

Formula

V = s³

Variables

s = side length

Application

Cube volume

Example

Box 8m × 5m × 3m: V = 8 × 5 × 3 = 120m³

Formula

V = lwh

Variables

l = length, w = width, h = height

Application

Rectangular prism volume

Example

Cylinder with radius 3cm and height 10cm: V = π(3²)(10) = 90π ≈ 282.74cm³

Formula

V = πr²h

Variables

r = radius, h = height

Application

Cylinder volume

Example

Cone with radius 6m and height 9m: V = ⅓π(6²)(9) = 108π ≈ 339.29m³

Formula

V = ⅓πr²h

Variables

r = radius, h = height

Application

Cone volume

Example

Pyramid with base 12cm × 8cm and height 15cm: V = ⅓(12)(8)(15) = 480cm³

Formula

V = ⅓lwh

Variables

l = length, w = width, h = height

Application

Rectangular pyramid volume

Example

Sphere with radius 3m: V = (4/3)π(3³) = 36π ≈ 113.10m³

Formula

V = (4/3)πr³

Variables

r = radius

Application

Sphere volume

Exam Tips

  • Remember: cones and pyramids always have ⅓ in their volume formula
  • Double-check if the problem gives radius or diameter
  • Volume answers are always in cubic units
  • For spheres, cube the radius: r³, not r²

Key Points

  • Volume measures the amount of three-dimensional space a solid occupies
  • Always expressed in cubic units (cm³, m³, L)
  • Cones and pyramids have volume = ⅓ × base area × height
  • Remember the ⅓ factor - most common source of errors

Definitions

Term

Volume

Definition

The amount of three-dimensional space occupied by a solid object

Importance

Essential for calculating capacity, storage, and material requirements

Section Title

Volume - Space Occupied by Solids

Common Mistakes

  • Forgetting the ⅓ factor for cones and pyramids
  • Confusing radius and diameter in sphere/cylinder formulas
  • Using wrong height (slant height vs. perpendicular height)
  • Mixing up area and volume formulas

Formulas

Example

Line y = 2x + 3 has slope 2 and y-intercept 3

Formula

y = mx + b

Variables

m = slope, b = y-intercept

Application

Slope-intercept form (easiest to graph)

Example

Line through (2, 5) with slope 3: y - 5 = 3(x - 2) → y = 3x - 1

Formula

y - y₁ = m(x - x₁)

Variables

m = slope, (x₁, y₁) = known point

Application

Point-slope form

Example

3x + 2y = 12 can be rewritten as y = -1.5x + 6

Formula

Ax + By = C

Variables

A, B, C = constants (A and B not both zero)

Application

Standard form

Example

Points (1, 3) and (4, 9): m = (9-3)/(4-1) = 6/3 = 2

Formula

m = (y₂ - y₁)/(x₂ - x₁)

Variables

(x₁, y₁) and (x₂, y₂) = two points on the line

Application

Slope between two points

Exam Tips

  • Always reduce slope fractions to lowest terms
  • For perpendicular lines: if slope is a/b, perpendicular slope is -b/a
  • Graph points carefully to check your line equation
  • Remember: horizontal lines have slope 0, vertical lines have undefined slope

Key Points

  • A line can be expressed in three main forms: slope-intercept, point-slope, and standard form
  • Slope represents the rate of change (rise over run)
  • Parallel lines have equal slopes; perpendicular lines have negative reciprocal slopes
  • Understanding slope is crucial for identifying line relationships

Definitions

Term

Slope

Definition

The measure of steepness of a line, calculated as rise over run

Importance

Determines if lines are parallel, perpendicular, or neither

Term

Y-intercept

Definition

The y-coordinate where the line crosses the y-axis (when x = 0)

Importance

Starting point for graphing in slope-intercept form

Term

Parallel Lines

Definition

Lines with the same slope (m₁ = m₂) that never intersect

Importance

Key concept in coordinate geometry and real-world applications

Term

Perpendicular Lines

Definition

Lines whose slopes multiply to -1 (m₁ × m₂ = -1)

Importance

Form 90° angles, common in construction and design problems

Section Title

Equation of a Line

Common Mistakes

  • Confusing x and y coordinates when calculating slope
  • Forgetting negative signs when working with negative reciprocals
  • Not simplifying slope fractions
  • Mixing up parallel and perpendicular slope relationships

Formulas

Example

Distance between (1, 2) and (4, 6): d = √[(4-1)² + (6-2)²] = √[9 + 16] = √25 = 5

Formula

d = √[(x₂-x₁)² + (y₂-y₁)²]

Variables

(x₁, y₁) and (x₂, y₂) = two points

Application

Distance between two points

Example

Midpoint of (2, 4) and (8, 10): M = ((2+8)/2, (4+10)/2) = (5, 7)

Formula

M = ((x₁+x₂)/2, (y₁+y₂)/2)

Variables

(x₁, y₁) and (x₂, y₂) = endpoints

Application

Midpoint of line segment

Exam Tips

  • Always plot points to visualize the problem
  • Double-check coordinate substitution carefully
  • Simplify square roots when possible
  • Midpoint coordinates are averages - they should be between the original points

Key Points

  • Distance formula comes from the Pythagorean theorem
  • Midpoint is the average of x-coordinates and y-coordinates
  • These formulas connect algebra with geometry
  • Essential for solving coordinate geometry problems

Definitions

Term

Distance Formula

Definition

Formula to find the straight-line distance between two points in a coordinate plane

Importance

Based on Pythagorean theorem, essential for geometric calculations

Term

Midpoint

Definition

The point that is exactly halfway between two given points

Importance

Used in finding centers, bisecting segments, and solving geometric problems

Section Title

Distance and Midpoint Formulas

Common Mistakes

  • Forgetting to take the square root in distance formula
  • Mixing up coordinates when substituting into formulas
  • Not simplifying square roots completely
  • Confusing midpoint with distance calculations

Connections

  • Perimeter and area calculations often appear in coordinate geometry problems
  • Linear equations help solve optimization problems involving area and volume
  • Distance formula connects algebraic calculations with geometric measurements
  • Slope concepts apply to real-world rate problems and physics applications
  • These topics frequently combine in UPCAT word problems involving rectangular lots, circular gardens, and construction scenarios

Exam Strategy

Focus on memorizing the core formulas, but more importantly, understand when to apply each one. Practice identifying which formula to use based on given information. For composite figures, break them into familiar shapes. In coordinate geometry, always plot points when possible to visualize the problem. Remember the ⅓ factor for cones and pyramids, and always check units in your final answer. Most UPCAT problems will test your ability to combine these concepts, so practice multi-step problems that involve both mensuration and coordinate geometry.

Quick Review Questions

What is the area of a triangle with base 12 cm and height 8 cm?

Using A = ½bh: A = ½(12)(8) = ½(96) = 48 cm²

Find the slope of the line passing through points (2, 3) and (6, 11).

Using m = (y₂-y₁)/(x₂-x₁): m = (11-3)/(6-2) = 8/4 = 2

What is the volume of a cone with radius 4 cm and height 9 cm?

Using V = ⅓πr²h: V = ⅓π(4²)(9) = ⅓π(16)(9) = 48π cm³

If a line has slope 3/4, what is the slope of a line perpendicular to it?

For perpendicular lines, slopes are negative reciprocals. If m₁ = 3/4, then m₂ = -4/3

What is the circumference of a circle with diameter 14 cm?

Using C = πd: C = π(14) = 14π cm. Note: we use diameter directly, not radius

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