How many diagonal rectangles are needed to cover an orthogonal polygon? (Q1577551): Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 21:56, 19 March 2024
scientific article
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English | How many diagonal rectangles are needed to cover an orthogonal polygon? |
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How many diagonal rectangles are needed to cover an orthogonal polygon? (English)
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3 September 2001
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A polygon whose edges are horizontal and vertical is called ``orthogonal''. A rectangle with a pair of opposite corners at the vertices of an orthogonal polygon is ``diagonal'' (in that polygon). The author finds that any orthogonal polygon with \(n\) vertices can be covered by (the union of) \(\lfloor {3\over 4}n \rfloor-2-\omega\) diagonal rectangles where \(\omega=1\) when \(n=8, 12, 16\) and \(\omega =0\) otherwise. Furthermore this result is sharp and settles a problem proposed by Mamoru Watanabe at the British Combinatorial Conference 1997.
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covering
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rectangle
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orthogonal polygon
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