Greedy triangulation

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Greedy triangulation
Polygon Greedy triangulation steps
Polygon Greedy triangulation steps. On each step a new edge (red) is added joining the nearest pair of vertex, without crossing a previously edge
ClassSearch algorithm
Data structure
Worst-case performance
Best-case performance

The Greedy Triangulation is a method to compute a polygon triangulation or a Point set triangulation using a greedy schema, which adds edges one by one to the solution in strict increasing order by length, with the condition that an edge cannot cut a previously inserted edge.[1][2]

References[edit]

  1. ^ J. Loera, J. Rambau and F. Santos (2010), Triangulations: Structures and Algorithms (2nd revised ed.), Springer-Verlag, ISBN 9783642129711 Chapter 3: Polygon Triangulation: pp.103.
  2. ^ Mark de Berg, Marc van Kreveld, Mark Overmars, and Otfried Schwarzkopf (2000), Computational Geometry (2nd revised ed.), Springer-Verlag, ISBN 3-540-65620-0{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)