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  1. Polygon is a major worldwide player in property damage control, providing solutions to prevent, control and mitigate all kinds of property damage.[1]
  2. In geometry, a polygon ( ) is a plane figure that is described by a finite number of straight line segments connected to form a closed polygonal chain or polygonal circuit.[2]
  3. The segments of a polygonal circuit are called its edges or sides, and the points where two edges meet are the polygon's vertices (singular: vertex) or corners.[2]
  4. The interior of a solid polygon is sometimes called its body.[2]
  5. A simple polygon is one which does not intersect itself.[2]
  6. Polygon comes from Greek.[3]
  7. A convex polygon has no angles pointing inwards.[3]
  8. A simple polygon has only one boundary, and it doesn't cross over itself.[3]
  9. A complex polygon intersects itself![3]
  10. Polygon, In geometry, any closed curve consisting of a set of line segments (sides) connected such that no two segments cross.[4]
  11. If none of the sides, when extended, intersects the polygon, it is a convex polygon; otherwise it is concave.[4]
  12. The following example specifies a GeoJSON Polygon with an exterior ring and no interior rings (or holes).[5]
  13. A polygon is any shape made up of straight lines that can be drawn on a flat surface, like a piece of paper.[6]
  14. These can sometimes be useful in helping you remember how many sides a polygon has.[6]
  15. Circles and shapes that include curves are not polygons - a polygon, by definition, is made up of straight lines.[6]
  16. Furthermore, if the shape is a regular polygon (all angles and length of sides are equal) then you can simply divide the sum of the internal angles by the number of sides to find each internal angle.[6]
  17. Other sources commonly define a polygon (in the sense illustrated above) as a "closed plane figure with straight edges" (Gellert et al.[7]
  18. A polygon with vertices (and sides) is known as an -gon.[7]
  19. If all sides and angles are equivalent, the polygon is called regular.[7]
  20. For some polygons, several different terms are used interchangeably, e.g., nonagon and enneagon both refer to the polygon with sides.[7]
  21. A polygon is a closed figure composed of line segments.[8]
  22. Apparently, this property — called a constructible polygon — was known to the ancient Greeks.[9]
  23. And while in-game enemies and items still appear in their original, comically low-polygon models, their sharp edges now come across as charmingly retro.[9]
  24. The Voronoi polygon is part of a different algorithmic way to break up material.[9]
  25. The weather service continues to improve its false alarm rates, and the polygon warnings forecasters use don’t include an entire county but those areas in the direct path of the storm.[9]
  26. Your third-grade students will learn to identify the properties of a polygon as they work through a variety of practical questions in this interactive math game.[10]
  27. Students may be asked to identify whether the given shape is a polygon.[10]
  28. They may be asked how many sides or angles the given polygon has.[10]
  29. Students may be required to choose which shape is not a polygon.[10]
  30. A polygon represents an area enclosed by a closed path (or loop), which is defined by a series of coordinates.[11]
  31. Polygon objects are similar to Polyline objects in that they consist of a series of coordinates in an ordered sequence.[11]
  32. You can define custom colors, weights, and opacities for the edge of the polygon (the stroke) and custom colors and opacities for the enclosed area (the fill).[11]
  33. It handles polygon winding for you, making it easier to draw polygons with holes.[11]
  34. A polygon is usually named after how many sides it has, a polygon with n-sides is called a n-gon.[12]
  35. As in the Polygon with default label or Polygon with styled label examples, the rule also contains a <TextSymbolizer> at lines 14-35 for drawing a text label on top of the polygon.[13]
  36. The resulting style produces a polygon stroke that gets larger as one zooms in and labels that only display when zoomed in to a sufficient level.[13]
  37. To truly understand Polygon’s strategies, you have to consider our motivation.[14]
  38. The Polygon is a vibrant art institution that inspires and provokes cultural insight through adventurous programming.[15]
  39. A polygon is a flat, two-dimensional (2D) shape with straight sides that is fully closed (all the sides are joined up).[16]
  40. The vocabulary ‘polygon’, ‘regular’ and ‘irregular’ will be used.[16]
  41. Children will be given shapes to sort and asked to explain why the polygon is regular using the properties of angles and sides.[16]
  42. A detailed discussion of the point in polygon problem for arbitrary polygons is given.[17]
  43. logical controlling the polygon shading mode: see below for details.[18]
  44. the color for filling the polygon.[18]
  45. They also have at least one diagonal that lies outside the polygon.[19]
  46. We say that a polygon is regular if all of its sides have the same length, and all of the angles have the same size.[19]
  47. PolygonGraphics ( options ) Describes a polygon defined by an hierarchy of linear rings which make up the outer shape and any nested holes.[20]
  48. The polygon conforms to the curvature of the globe and can be placed on the surface or at altitude and can optionally be extruded into a volume.[20]
  49. Gets or sets the numeric Property specifying the altitude of the polygon extrusion.[20]
  50. That is the reasoning behind the Cyber Polygon exercise, which has already proven itself effective.[21]
  51. Polygons Polygons are represented by lists of points (the vertexes of the polygon).[22]
  52. ( x1 , y1 , ... , xn , yn ) x1 , y1 , ... , xn , yn where the points are the end points of the line segments comprising the boundary of the polygon.[22]
  53. o Inside this document, the term "geometry type" refers to seven case-sensitive strings: "Point", "MultiPoint", "LineString", "MultiLineString", "Polygon", "MultiPolygon", and "GeometryCollection".[23]
  54. an array of Polygon coordinates in the case of a MultiPolygon geometry.[23]
  55. For type "Polygon", the "coordinates" member MUST be an array of linear ring coordinate arrays.[23]

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Spacy 패턴 목록

  • [{'LEMMA': 'polygon'}]
  • [{'LEMMA': '2-polytope'}]