Search: keyword:preciseworld
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BP961 |
| Includes itself on the left vs. includes itself on the right. |
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COMMENTS
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Some examples are Bongard Problems with this solution. |
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CROSSREFS
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Adjacent-numbered pages:
BP956 BP957 BP958 BP959 BP960  *  BP962 BP963 BP964 BP965 BP966
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KEYWORD
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nice, precise, dual, handed, leftright, perfect, infinitedetail, both, neither, preciseworld
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CONCEPT
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fractal (info | search), recursion (info | search), self-reference (info | search)
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AUTHOR
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Aaron David Fairbanks
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CROSSREFS
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Adjacent-numbered pages:
BP957 BP958 BP959 BP960 BP961  *  BP963 BP964 BP965 BP966 BP967
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KEYWORD
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precise, allsorted, minimal, dual, blackwhite, gap, left-finite, right-finite, left-full, right-full, left-null, finished, preciseworld, unstableworld
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WORLD
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[smaller | same | bigger] zoom in left (blank_image) | zoom in right (black_image)
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AUTHOR
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Leo Crabbe
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BP988 |
| Number of dots is a power of 2 vs. not so. |
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BP989 |
| Number of dots is n factorial for some n vs. not so. |
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BP993 |
| Net corresponds do a unique solid vs. net can be folded into multiple different solids. |
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BP994 |
| Net corresponds to a solid that can tessellate 3D space vs. net does not correspond to a solid that can tessellate 3D space. |
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COMMENTS
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More specifically these solids are polyhedra, and are often called "space-filling".
There is ambiguity here regarding some nets that can be folded to make multiple different solids. For example EX8175 could correspond to a cuboid with a pyramid-like protrusion at each end, a protrusion at one end and an indent at the other, or 2 indents. Only the second of these options can tessellate 3D space. For clarity's sake examples like this are not sorted on either side. |
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CROSSREFS
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Adjacent-numbered pages:
BP989 BP990 BP991 BP992 BP993  *  BP995 BP996 BP997 BP998 BP999
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KEYWORD
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stub, precise, 3d, perfect, preciseworld
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CONCEPT
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3d_net (info | search), 3d_solid (info | search)
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WORLD
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polyhedron_net [smaller | same | bigger]
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AUTHOR
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Leo Crabbe
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BP996 |
| Net corresponds to a convex solid vs. net corresponds to a concave solid. |
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BP997 |
| There exists a loop that passes through every white square once without passing through the black square vs. there exists no such loop. |
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BP1011 |
| Polygon can be inscribed in a circle vs. not so. |
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BP1017 |
| Line segments linking same-coloured dots would intersect vs. not so. |
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CROSSREFS
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This is a less noisy version of BP261.
Adjacent-numbered pages:
BP1012 BP1013 BP1014 BP1015 BP1016  *  BP1018 BP1019 BP1020 BP1021 BP1022
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KEYWORD
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easy, nice, precise, allsorted, perfect, traditional, finishedexamples, preciseworld
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CONCEPT
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lines_coincide (info | search), imagined_line_or_curve (info | search), imagined_entity (info | search), overlap (info | search)
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AUTHOR
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Leo Crabbe
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