pointed$61995$ - translation to ελληνικό
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pointed$61995$ - translation to ελληνικό

SUBSET OF THE PLANE THAT LIES BETWEEN ANY THREE MUTUALLY TANGENT CONVEX SETS
Pseudo-triangle; Pseudotriangulation; Pseudo-triangulation; Pointed pseudotriangulation; Pointed pseudo-triangulation
  • A shelling sequence of a planar point set and the pointed pseudotriangulation derived from this sequence.
  • The pseudotriangle between three smooth convex sets (left), and a polygonal pseudotriangle (right).

pointed      
adj. οξύς, δηκτικός, αιχμηρός
gothic revival         
  • Sir Walter Scott]] whose novels popularised the [[Medieval]] period from which the Gothic Revival drew its inspiration
  • Basilica of Sainte Clotilde Sanctuary, Paris, France
  • [[Trinity College, Hartford]]: Burges's revised, three-quadrangle, masterplan
  • [[Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus]] in [[Mumbai]], India
  • The Canadian Parliament Buildings from the Ottawa River, including Gothic Revival library at rear]], built between 1859 and 1876
  • [[Cologne Cathedral]], finally completed in 1880 although construction began in 1248
  • [[Exeter College, Oxford]] Chapel
  • Cast-iron Gothic tracery supports a bridge by [[Calvert Vaux]], in [[Central Park]], New York City
  • Venetian Gothic in [[Baku]], [[Azerbaijan]].
  • [[Carcassonne]] – Viollet-le-Duc restored the citadel from 1853.
  • [[Liverpool Cathedral]], whose construction ran from 1903 to 1978
  • Construction of [[Washington National Cathedral]] began in 1907 and was completed in 1990.
  • [[Saint Clotilde Basilica]] completed 1857, Paris
  • The [[Palace of Westminster]] (1840–1876), designed by [[Charles Barry]] & [[Augustus Pugin]]
  • Gothic façade of the [[Parlement de Rouen]] in France, built between 1499 and 1508, which later inspired neo-Gothic revival in the 19th century
  • Church of St Avila, Bodega, California
  • Georgia]], United States)
  • p=7}}
  • Sir Christopher Wren]] 1681–82, to match the Tudor surroundings
  • [[Pilgrimage Church of Saint John of Nepomuk]] by [[Jan Santini Aichel]] (around 1720)
ARCHITECTURAL MOVEMENT
Neo-Gothic architecture; Neo-Gothic; Victorian Gothic; Gothic Revival; Neo-gothic architecture; Neogothic; Neo Gothic; Gothic Revival style architecture; Gothic Revival style; Gothic revival style; Gothic-revival; Neo-gothic; Gothic revival; Gothic revival architecture; Gothic Revival Style architecture; Gothic Revival in the decorative arts; Gothic survival; Neo-Gothicism; Goth revival; Neo-Gothic style; Gothick; Pointed style; Victorian Gothic architecture; Late Gothic Revival architecture; Gothic Revival Architecture; Late Gothic Revival style; Late Gothic Revival; German gothic; Gothic Revivalist; Jigsaw Gothic; High victorian gothic; Neogothic architecture
νεογοτθικός ρυθμός
Gothic style         
  • ''High Gothic'' flying buttresses{{Break}}Metz Cathedral (1220–)
  • Monastery of Batalha]] in [[Portugal]]
  • [[Beauvais Cathedral]], south transept (consecrated 1272)
  • Grote Kerk (Breda)
  • Plan of a Gothic cathedral
  • [[Rouen Cathedral]] from the south west – façade towers 12th–15th century, the flamboyant tower to the 15th century, spire rebuilt in 16th century
  • Donjon of the [[Château de Vincennes]], (1337–)
  • Crossing vault, [[Seville Cathedral]]
  • St. John's Cathedral ('s-Hertogenbosch)
  • ''High Gothic'' west front, [[Reims Cathedral]] (1211–)
  • [[Plateresque]] façade, [[University of Salamanca]] (late 15th century)
  • [[Grotesque]] of [[Selby Abbey]] (14th century)
  • ''Perpendicular Gothic'' east end, Henry VII Chapel (c. 1503–12)
  • ''Plate tracery'', [[Lincoln Cathedral]] "Dean's Eye" rose window (c.1225)
  • [[Medieval Louvre]] in early 15th century
  • Notre-Dame de Paris – deep portals, a rose window, balance of horizontal and vertical elements. Early Gothic.
  • Structure of an early six-part Gothic rib vault. (Drawing by [[Eugène Viollet-le-Duc]])
  • [[Sainte-Chapelle de Vincennes]] (1370s)
  • ''Flamboyant Gothic'' east end,{{Break}}Prague Cathedral (1344–)
  • Windows of [[Sainte-Chapelle]] (13th century)
  • ''Early Gothic'' triple elevation{{Break}}Sens Cathedral (1135–1164)
  • [[Thistle Chapel]] at [[Edinburgh's High Kirk]] (completed 1910)
  • ''Rayonnant Gothic'' west front{{Break}}Strasbourg Cathedral (1276–)
  • Oxen sculpture in High Gothic towers of [[Laon Cathedral]] (13th century)
  • Pointed arches in the [[Tower of the church of San Salvador]], [[Teruel]]
STYLE OF ARCHITECTURE
Gothic style; Gothic Cathedrals; Gothical; Gothic (architecture); Gothic Architecture; Late-Gothic; Florid Gothic; Late-Gothic style; Lancet arch; Opus Francigenum; Gothic architectures; Gothic design; Gothic church; Acte arch; Late Gothic (architecture); Late Gothic style; Late Gothic architecture; Opus francigenum; Pointed architecture; Gothic mansion
γοτθικό

Ορισμός

knitting needle
(knitting needles)
Knitting needles are thin plastic or metal rods which you use when you are knitting.
N-COUNT

Βικιπαίδεια

Pseudotriangle

In Euclidean plane geometry, a pseudotriangle (pseudo-triangle) is the simply connected subset of the plane that lies between any three mutually tangent convex sets. A pseudotriangulation (pseudo-triangulations) is a partition of a region of the plane into pseudotriangles, and a pointed pseudotriangulation is a pseudotriangulation in which at each vertex the incident edges span an angle of less than π.

Although the words "pseudotriangle" and "pseudotriangulation" have been used with various meanings in mathematics for much longer, the terms as used here were introduced in 1993 by Michel Pocchiola and Gert Vegter in connection with the computation of visibility relations and bitangents among convex obstacles in the plane. Pointed pseudotriangulations were first considered by Ileana Streinu (2000, 2005) as part of her solution to the carpenter's ruler problem, a proof that any simple polygonal path in the plane can be straightened out by a sequence of continuous motions. Pseudotriangulations have also been used for collision detection among moving objects and for dynamic graph drawing and shape morphing. Pointed pseudotriangulations arise in rigidity theory as examples of minimally rigid planar graphs, and in methods for placing guards in connection with the art gallery theorem. The shelling antimatroid of a planar point set gives rise to pointed pseudotriangulations, although not all pointed pseudotriangulations can arise in this way.

For a detailed survey of much of the material discussed here, see Rote, Santos, and Streinu (2008).