Search: concept:tiling
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Displaying 1-10 of 26 results found.
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BP122 |
| Line divides interior into two regions vs. not so. |
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BP201 |
| Two of the shapes make tiles along their border lines vs. not so. |
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BP229 |
| When the objects are rotated and their dots are overlapped and eliminated, they form three-square-tall structures with columns of the same color vs. not so. |
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COMMENTS
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Explanation / justification of BP229 by its creator:
"Long (doubly sized) objects are purines (A & G).
Short objects are pyrimidines (C & T).
Black are those forming triple Hbond (G and C).
White are those forming double Hbond (A & T).
On the left we have matching codes, i.e., bases, doublets or triplets that, when rotated, can pair correctly (A with T, G with C), binding the two strands.
On the right we have objects that no matter how they are rotated they do not pair correctly (because of bumps, wrong color codes, etc)." |
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CROSSREFS
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Adjacent-numbered pages:
BP224 BP225 BP226 BP227 BP228  *  BP230 BP231 BP232 BP233 BP234
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KEYWORD
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unorderedpair, traditional
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CONCEPT
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rotation_required (info | search), tiling (info | search), specific_value (info | search), specificity (info | search)
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AUTHOR
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Giuseppe Insana
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BP283 |
| Rectangle left after tiling all black shapes into empty square vs. triangle left after tiling all black shapes into empty square. |
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BP289 |
| Shapes, if tiled up properly, form a square vs. shapes cannot form a square no matter how they are tiled. |
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BP323 |
| Jigsaw puzzle pieces can be assembled into a square vs. jigsaw puzzle pieces cannot be assembled into a square. |
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BP335 |
| Tessellates the plane vs. does not tessellate the plane. |
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COMMENTS
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EX7152 is an example of a shape than can be stretched in such a way that it no longer tessellates the plane. This is a property that is only exhibited by shapes that tessellate with rotated copies of themselves. - Leo Crabbe, Mar 05 2021 |
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CROSSREFS
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Adjacent-numbered pages:
BP330 BP331 BP332 BP333 BP334  *  BP336 BP337 BP338 BP339 BP340
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KEYWORD
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nice, stretch, unstable, math, hardsort, creativeexamples, proofsrequired, perfect, pixelperfect, traditional
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CONCEPT
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infinite_plane (info | search), tessellation (info | search), tiling (info | search)
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WORLD
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shape [smaller | same | bigger] zoom in left (fill_shape)
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AUTHOR
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Aaron David Fairbanks
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BP344 |
| Shape can tile itself vs. shape cannot tile itself. |
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COMMENTS
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Left examples are sometimes called "rep-tiles."
The tiles all must be the same size. More specifically, all left examples can tile themselves only using scaled down and rotated versions of themselves with all tiles the same size. Right examples cannot tile themselves using scaled down rotated versions of themselves or even reflected versions of themselves with all tiles the same size.
Without the puzzle piece-like shape EX4120 on the right side the current examples also allow the solution "shape can tile with itself so as to create a parallelogram vs. shape cannot tile with itself so as to create a parallelogram." |
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CROSSREFS
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See BP532 for a version with fractals.
Adjacent-numbered pages:
BP339 BP340 BP341 BP342 BP343  *  BP345 BP346 BP347 BP348 BP349
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EXAMPLE
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Go to https://oebp.org/files/yet.png for an illustration of how some left-sorted shapes tile themselves. |
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KEYWORD
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hard, precise, notso, unstable, math, hardsort, creativeexamples, proofsrequired, perfect, traditional
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CONCEPT
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recursion (info | search), self-reference (info | search), tiling (info | search), imagined_shape (info | search), imagined_entity (info | search)
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WORLD
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shape [smaller | same | bigger]
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AUTHOR
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Aaron David Fairbanks
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BP386 |
| Lower shape can be used as a tile to build the upper one vs. not so. |
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CROSSREFS
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Adjacent-numbered pages:
BP381 BP382 BP383 BP384 BP385  *  BP387 BP388 BP389 BP390 BP391
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KEYWORD
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nice, precise, allsorted, left-narrow, perfect, pixelperfect, orderedpair, traditional, preciseworld, left-listable, right-listable
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CONCEPT
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tiling (info | search)
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AUTHOR
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Jago Collins
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BP529 |
| Fractal tiles itself with smaller non-rotated (nor reflected) copies of itself vs. fractal requires turning to tile itself. |
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