Polygons | Covering problems | Computational geometry

Polygon covering

In geometry, a covering of a polygon is a set of primitive units (e.g. squares) whose union equals the polygon. A polygon covering problem is a problem of finding a covering with a smallest number of units for a given polygon. This is an important class of problems in computational geometry. There are many different polygon covering problems, depending on the type of polygon being covered. An example polygon covering problem is: given a rectilinear polygon, find a smallest set of squares whose union equals the polygon. In some scenarios, it is not required to cover the entire polygon but only its edges (this is called polygon edge covering) or its vertices (this is called polygon vertex covering). In a covering problem, the units in the covering are allowed to overlap, as long as their union is exactly equal to the target polygon. This is in contrast to a packing problem, in which the units must be disjoint and their union may be smaller than the target polygon, and to a polygon partition problem, in which the units must be disjoint and their union must be equal to the target polygon. A polygon covering problem is a special case of the set cover problem. In general, the problem of finding a smallest set covering is NP-complete, but for special classes of polygons, a smallest polygon time. A covering of a polygon P is a collection of maximal units, possibly overlapping, whose union equals P. A minimal covering is a covering that does not contain any other covering (i.e. it is a local minimum). A minimum covering is a covering with a smallest number of units (i.e. a global minimum). Every minimum covering is minimal, but not vice versa. (Wikipedia).

Polygon covering
Video thumbnail

What are four types of polygons

👉 Learn about polygons and how to classify them. A polygon is a plane shape bounded by a finite chain of straight lines. A polygon can be concave or convex and it can also be regular or irregular. A concave polygon is a polygon in which at least one of its interior angles is greater than 1

From playlist Classify Polygons

Video thumbnail

What are the names of different types of polygons based on the number of sides

👉 Learn about polygons and how to classify them. A polygon is a plane shape bounded by a finite chain of straight lines. A polygon can be concave or convex and it can also be regular or irregular. A concave polygon is a polygon in which at least one of its interior angles is greater than 1

From playlist Classify Polygons

Video thumbnail

Sketch a net from a 3D figure

👉 Learn about polygons and how to classify them. A polygon is a plane shape bounded by a finite chain of straight lines. A polygon can be concave or convex and it can also be regular or irregular. A concave polygon is a polygon in which at least one of its interior angles is greater than 1

From playlist Classify Polygons

Video thumbnail

What is the definition of a regular polygon and how do you find the interior angles

👉 Learn about polygons and how to classify them. A polygon is a plane shape bounded by a finite chain of straight lines. A polygon can be concave or convex and it can also be regular or irregular. A concave polygon is a polygon in which at least one of its interior angles is greater than 1

From playlist Classify Polygons

Video thumbnail

What is a net

👉 Learn about polygons and how to classify them. A polygon is a plane shape bounded by a finite chain of straight lines. A polygon can be concave or convex and it can also be regular or irregular. A concave polygon is a polygon in which at least one of its interior angles is greater than 1

From playlist Classify Polygons

Video thumbnail

What is the difference between a regular and irregular polygon

👉 Learn about polygons and how to classify them. A polygon is a plane shape bounded by a finite chain of straight lines. A polygon can be concave or convex and it can also be regular or irregular. A concave polygon is a polygon in which at least one of its interior angles is greater than 1

From playlist Classify Polygons

Video thumbnail

Classifying a polygon in two different ways ex 4

👉 Learn about polygons and how to classify them. A polygon is a plane shape bounded by a finite chain of straight lines. A polygon can be concave or convex and it can also be regular or irregular. A concave polygon is a polygon in which at least one of its interior angles is greater than 1

From playlist Classify Polygons

Video thumbnail

Sketch a figure from a net

👉 Learn about polygons and how to classify them. A polygon is a plane shape bounded by a finite chain of straight lines. A polygon can be concave or convex and it can also be regular or irregular. A concave polygon is a polygon in which at least one of its interior angles is greater than 1

From playlist Classify Polygons

Video thumbnail

What is the difference between convex and concave

👉 Learn about polygons and how to classify them. A polygon is a plane shape bounded by a finite chain of straight lines. A polygon can be concave or convex and it can also be regular or irregular. A concave polygon is a polygon in which at least one of its interior angles is greater than 1

From playlist Classify Polygons

Video thumbnail

3. Polygons in Sensors and Security

MASSOLIT Featured Course of the Month This video is one part of a series of lectures that make up one MASSOLIT course. The full course is freely available for one month and will be removed from YouTube at the end of September 2022. More info is available at https://www.massolit.io/?sourc

From playlist Maths

Video thumbnail

Dimers and Integrability - Richard Kenyon

Richard Kenyon Brown University March 29, 2013 This is joint work with A. B. Goncharov. To any convex integer polygon we associate a Poisson variety, which is essentially the moduli space of connections on line bundles on (certain) bipartite graphs on a torus. There is an underlying integr

From playlist Mathematics

Video thumbnail

Area and Perimeter of Geometric Figures

Worked out examples involving area and perimeter.

From playlist Geometry

Video thumbnail

Rails Conf 2012 Getting Down To Earth: Geospatial Analysis With Rails by Daniel Azuma

It is no secret that location has become ubiquitous. Mobile GPS, available data sets, and easy-to-use mapping services have brought geospatial information within reach of web developers. Location already plays a significant role in many of the major services such as Twitter, Facebook, and

From playlist Rails Conf 2012

Video thumbnail

What Is Matic Network? | Matic Network Explained For Beginners | Blockchain | Simplilearn

According to Market Cap, MATIC is among the top 20 cryptocurrencies. This video on MATIC covers all of the important concepts from basics to advanced. Also, it covers all the various aspects revolving around it like what MATIC and Polygon is, what are its features and why is it so importan

From playlist Blockchain Tutorial Videos 🔥[2022 Updated] | Simplilearn

Video thumbnail

JavaScript Tutorial 9 Paint App 3

Code & Images Here : http://bit.ly/JSPaint3 Best JavaScript Book : https://amzn.to/2GcKzQk Subscribe to Me : http://bit.ly/2FWQZTx In this part I finish my JavaScript Paint App. It can draw brush strokes, lines, rectangles, circles, ellipses, and polygons. The app also saves and loads new

From playlist JavaScript Tutorial Real Projects

Video thumbnail

Kaapi with Kuriosity: Tilings (ONLINE) by Mahuya Datta

Kaapi with Kuriosity Tilings (ONLINE) Speaker: Mahuya Datta (Indian Statistical Institute, Kolkata) When: 4:00 pm to 5:30 pm Sunday, 27 March 2022 Where: Zoom meeting and Livestream on ICTS YouTube channel Abstract: Tiling is a way of arranging plane shapes so that they completely co

From playlist Kaapi With Kuriosity (A Monthly Public Lecture Series)

Video thumbnail

Dimers and Beauville Integrable systems by Terrence George

PROGRAM: COMBINATORIAL ALGEBRAIC GEOMETRY: TROPICAL AND REAL (HYBRID) ORGANIZERS: Arvind Ayyer (IISc, India), Madhusudan Manjunath (IITB, India) and Pranav Pandit (ICTS-TIFR, India) DATE: 27 June 2022 to 08 July 2022 VENUE: Madhava Lecture Hall and Online Algebraic geometry is the study

From playlist Combinatorial Algebraic Geometry: Tropical and Real (HYBRID)

Video thumbnail

A visibility problem, how many guards are enough?

Get free access to over 2500 documentaries on CuriosityStream: https://curiositystream.com/majorprep (use promo code "majorprep" at sign up) STEMerch Store: https://stemerch.com/ Support the Channel: https://www.patreon.com/zachstar PayPal(one time donation): https://www.paypal.me/ZachStar

From playlist Puzzles

Video thumbnail

What is the difference between a regular and irregular polygons

👉 Learn about polygons and how to classify them. A polygon is a plane shape bounded by a finite chain of straight lines. A polygon can be concave or convex and it can also be regular or irregular. A concave polygon is a polygon in which at least one of its interior angles is greater than 1

From playlist Classify Polygons

Video thumbnail

Dynamics on the Moduli Spaces of Curves, I - Maryam Mirzakhani

Maryam Mirzakhani Stanford University March 26, 2012 For more videos, visit http://video.ias.edu

From playlist Mathematics

Related pages

Steiner point (computational geometry) | Intersection graph | Art gallery problem | Existential theory of the reals | Steiner tree problem | Rectilinear polygon | Pseudotriangle | Vertex cover | Set cover problem | Tessellation | Star polygon | Simple polygon | Spiral | Union (set theory) | Polygon | Covering problems | Perfect graph | Clique cover | General position | Computational geometry | Geometry | Polygon partition | Packing problems | Polygon triangulation