Mr. John has a dangerous relationship with a new type of Hot Cheetos Product, called Super Hot Cheetos Limon. He is so obsessed that he wants to cover his entire classroom floor in a 2-foot layer of Hot Cheetos and spend his whole summer break eating them.

The classroom is in the shape of a rectangular prism, 25 feet long, 20 feet wide and 10 feet high?
Each Super Hot Cheetos is approximately 3 inches long, 1 inch wide and 1 inch high
Each bag of Super Hot Cheetos contains approximately 50 Cheetos
How many bags of Super Hot Cheetos Limon should Mr. John buy?
rectangle of prism SA = 2(lw)+2(lw)+2(wh)

First of all the surface area has nothing to do with the question

Secondly, the height of the room has noting to do with it, since you want the Limos to fill only two feet high.
Thirdly, I assume you want to pack them so that no space is empty in the layer of 2 feet.

The length of the room is 300 inches by 240
so can place a layer of Limons 100 in length and 240 in width, for a total of 24000 in the first layer
but he wants them 2 feet or 24 inches high, so the total Limos is 576000 of them
number of bags he needs = 576000/50 = 11520

very silly question!

Now I'm like, well duh! Truly thkafnul for your help.

To calculate the number of bags of Super Hot Cheetos Limon Mr. John should buy to cover the entire classroom floor, we need to determine the total volume of the classroom and then divide it by the volume of one Super Hot Cheeto.

First, let's calculate the volume of the classroom:
Volume = length * width * height
Volume = 25 ft * 20 ft * 10 ft
Volume = 5000 ft³

Next, we need to calculate the volume of one Super Hot Cheeto:
Volume of one Super Hot Cheeto = length * width * height
Volume of one Super Hot Cheeto = 3 inches * 1 inch * 1 inch
Volume of one Super Hot Cheeto = 3 in³

Since the volume is in different units (ft³ and in³), we need to convert one of them. Let's convert the volume of one Super Hot Cheeto to ft³:
1 foot = 12 inches
Volume of one Super Hot Cheeto (in ft³) = (3 in³) / (12^3 in³/ft³)
Volume of one Super Hot Cheeto (in ft³) ≈ 0.00018 ft³

Now, we can calculate the number of bags of Super Hot Cheetos Mr. John should buy:
Number of bags = (Volume of classroom) / (Volume of one Super Hot Cheeto)
Number of bags ≈ 5000 ft³ / 0.00018 ft³ ≈ 27,777,778

Therefore, Mr. John should buy approximately 27,777,778 bags of Super Hot Cheetos Limon to cover the entire classroom floor with a 2-foot layer.