Pages that link to "Item:Q1116633"
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The following pages link to A new multiaffine approach to B-splines (Q1116633):
Displaying 23 items.
- The Bernstein polynomial basis: a centennial retrospective (Q448993) (← links)
- Developable rational Bézier and B-spline surfaces (Q672479) (← links)
- Rational parametric representation of parabolic cyclide: Formulation and applications (Q672530) (← links)
- The geometry of Tchebycheffian splines (Q687449) (← links)
- Blossoming and curvatures of surface patches (Q735520) (← links)
- Symmetric recursive algorithms for surfaces: B-patches and the de Boor algorithm for polynomials over triangles (Q809287) (← links)
- Blossoms are polar forms (Q918115) (← links)
- On Hermite interpolation with B-splines (Q1183536) (← links)
- A characterization theorem of multivariate splines in blossoming form (Q1183543) (← links)
- A short proof of an algorithm by Boehm (Q1195062) (← links)
- Blossoming Marsden's identity (Q1195065) (← links)
- Another knot insertion algorithm for B-spline curves (Q1195077) (← links)
- Error estimates for approximations from control nets (Q1208494) (← links)
- Using general polar values as control points for polynomial curves (Q1334848) (← links)
- A simple look at polar forms (Q1603478) (← links)
- Predicting and avoiding shear locking in beam vibration problems using the B-spline field approximation method (Q1817847) (← links)
- Knot insertion algorithms for piecewise polynomial spaces determined by connection matrices (Q1895888) (← links)
- Helix splines as an example of affine Tchebycheffian splines (Q1895904) (← links)
- de Boor-fix dual functionals and algorithms for Tchebycheffian B-spline curves (Q1923849) (← links)
- On a generalization of Bernstein polynomials and Bézier curves based on umbral calculus (Q2513781) (← links)
- Symmetric triangular algorithms for curves (Q2638713) (← links)
- New algorithms and techniques for computing with geometrically continuous spline curves of arbitrary degree (Q3989248) (← links)
- Generalized Bernstein polynomials and Bézier curves: an application of umbral calculus to computer aided geometric design (Q5953150) (← links)