Search: subworld:figure_made_of_segments
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BP77 |
| Angle divided in half vs. angle not divided in half. |
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REFERENCE
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M. M. Bongard, Pattern Recognition, Spartan Books, 1970, p. 239. |
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CROSSREFS
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Adjacent-numbered pages:
BP72 BP73 BP74 BP75 BP76  *  BP78 BP79 BP80 BP81 BP82
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KEYWORD
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nice, notso, stretch, finished, traditional, bongard
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CONCEPT
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angle (info | search), half (info | search), same_feature (info | search), same (info | search)
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WORLD
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[smaller | same | bigger]
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AUTHOR
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Mikhail M. Bongard
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BP304 |
| At least one (interior or exterior) right angle vs. no right angle (either interior or exterior). |
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BP328 |
| All sides are equal vs. all angles are equal. |
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BP329 |
| Regular polygon vs. not regular polygon. |
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BP340 |
| Regular star polygon vs. not so. |
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BP854 |
| Nothing vs. nothing. |
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BP897 |
| Wide angles connected to narrow angles vs. not so. |
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BP898 |
| Can fold into tetragonal disphenoid ("isosceles tetrahedron") vs. cannot. |
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COMMENTS
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Which two sides are the long sides and which side is the short side, or equivalently which angles are the wider angles and which angle is the narrower angle, is the only relevant information to consider for each triangle. Triangles are all assumed isosceles and congruent to one another.
All examples in this Problem feature four of these triangles connected by corners and/or edges. |
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CROSSREFS
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BP897 was conceived as a false solution for this.
Adjacent-numbered pages:
BP893 BP894 BP895 BP896 BP897  *  BP899 BP900 BP901 BP902 BP903
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KEYWORD
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hard, precise, allsorted, notso, math, preciseworld
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CONCEPT
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triangle (info | search)
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WORLD
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[smaller | same | bigger]
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AUTHOR
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Molly C Klenzak
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BP924 |
| Polygons where all sides are different lengths vs. Polygons where not all sides are different lengths. |
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COMMENTS
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All examples in this Problem are outlines of convex polygons.
This is a generalisation of scalene triangles to any polygon. |
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CROSSREFS
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The left side implies the right side of BP329 (regular vs. irregular polygons), but the converse is not true.
The left side of BP329 implies the right side, but the converse is not true.
Adjacent-numbered pages:
BP919 BP920 BP921 BP922 BP923  *  BP925 BP926 BP927 BP928 BP929
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EXAMPLE
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Any scalene triangle will fit on the left, because no two sides are equal.
However, any regular polygon will not fit on the left, because all of its sides are equal.
A random convex polygon will "almost surely" fit on the left. |
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KEYWORD
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nice, stretch, right-narrow, traditional
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CONCEPT
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all (info | search)
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WORLD
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polygon_outline [smaller | same | bigger]
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AUTHOR
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Jago Collins
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