irregular polygon |
It's our considered opinion that this question originated from someone who had a land survey in hand and wanted to verify the quoted acreage. That pretty much blows Taylor's first "step" out of the water:
"Have a land survey conducted by a professional surveyor."Ummm, dumbass, a professionally-done survey will state the acreage of the parcel, so there's no need to go through the ensuing steps. Those steps are, by the way,
"Multiply the length and width measurements to calculate the land area in square feet."and
"Divide the square footage by 43,560 to convert in into acres."We'll grant that most people don't know the conversion factor between square feet and acres (we already did), but that's pretty much the only thing Chad had to say that was worth repeating. His assumption that the parcel in question is a perfect rectangle borders on insulting. Few lots are actually perfect rectangles, especially in modern subdivisions with curving streets and cul-de-sacs.
Heck, Taylor didn't even have the balls to suggest breaking irregular lots into smaller, regular polygons; much less using an algorithmic approach such as that suggested by our sister blog, The Fixit Zone. In fact, we were so insulted by Taylor's assumption that we were as stupid as he seems to be that we named him the Dumbass of the Day.
We mean, really: hire a surveyor?
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