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  2. Catmull–Clark subdivision surface - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catmull–Clark_subdivision...

    Catmull–Clark surfaces are defined recursively, using the following refinement scheme. [1]Start with a mesh of an arbitrary polyhedron.All the vertices in this mesh shall be called original points.

  3. RE (complexity) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RE_(complexity)

    The set of recursive languages is a subset of both RE and co-RE. [3] In fact, it is the intersection of those two classes, because we can decide any problem for which there exists a recogniser and also a co-recogniser by simply interleaving them until one obtains a result.

  4. Catalan number - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catalan_number

    The associahedron of order 4 with the C 4 =14 full binary trees with 5 leaves. C n is the number of non-isomorphic ordered (or plane) trees with n + 1 vertices. [7] See encoding general trees as binary trees. For example, C n is the number of possible parse trees for a sentence (assuming binary branching), in natural language processing.

  5. Recursion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recursion

    A simple base case (or cases) — a terminating scenario that does not use recursion to produce an answer; A recursive step — a set of rules that reduces all successive cases toward the base case. For example, the following is a recursive definition of a person's ancestor. One's ancestor is either: One's parent (base case), or

  6. Recursion (computer science) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recursion_(computer_science)

    A common algorithm design tactic is to divide a problem into sub-problems of the same type as the original, solve those sub-problems, and combine the results. This is often referred to as the divide-and-conquer method; when combined with a lookup table that stores the results of previously solved sub-problems (to avoid solving them repeatedly and incurring extra computation time), it can be ...

  7. Kruskal's tree theorem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kruskal's_tree_theorem

    The version given here is that proven by Nash-Williams; Kruskal's formulation is somewhat stronger. All trees we consider are finite. Given a tree T with a root, and given vertices v, w, call w a successor of v if the unique path from the root to w contains v, and call w an immediate successor of v if additionally the path from v to w contains no other vertex.

  8. Litter-Robot 3 vs 4: Which is worth your money? - AOL

    www.aol.com/litter-robot-3-vs-4-113140464.html

    What our testers say about the user experience: Litter-Robot 3 Connect. 5-star rating. Philip says: "The cats adjusted very well to the new litter (we used to use non-clumping), and after a couple ...

  9. Pairwise summation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pairwise_summation

    Pairwise summation is the default summation algorithm in NumPy [9] and the Julia technical-computing language, [10] where in both cases it was found to have comparable speed to naive summation (thanks to the use of a large base case).