Interfaces are used when you have to enforce certain properties on an object (class).
Say for example: we have a car class and a motorbike class and a truck class. Each of these three classes should have a StartEngine() action. How the "engine is started" for each vehicle is left to each particular class, but the fact that they must have a StartEngine action is the domain of the interface. So, it makes the implementation of each method of an interface is compulsory.
So we can group some list of functionality in an interface and whenever a class implements the interface it needs to fulfill the contract. So, we cannot just implement some of the functionality of an interface. Actually, They are just to make sure that the functions (in the interface) are implemented in the inheriting class.
We can split functionality like bellow:
interface B
{
double S(double R);
double L(double R);
}
interface A: B
{
double V(double R,double h);
double W(double R,double h);
}