As for example a regular equilateral triangle will tessellate leaving no gaps or overlaps
It is a regular tessellation.
a tessellation that uses more than one type of regular polygon
A semi-regular tessellation is using multiple copies of two (or more) regular polygons so as to cover a plane without gaps or overlaps. The different shapes have sides of the same length and the shapes meet at vertices in the same (or exact reverse) order.The image used with this question:http://file2.answcdn.com/answ-cld/image/upload/w_300,h_115,c_fill,g_face:center,q_60,f_jpg/v1401482497/u6cbkstcqpiibq3485hr.pnguses a regular quadrilateral (a square) and an equilateral triangle. At each vertex, these two shapes, starting with the shape at the top, meet in the following order: TSTTS ot STTST.
A pure tessellation is a tiling of a plane using one single type of regular polygon, such as triangles, squares, or hexagons, without any gaps or overlaps. The polygons fit together perfectly to cover the entire plane, creating a repeating pattern that extends infinitely in all directions. Pure tessellations are often found in art, architecture, and mathematics due to their aesthetic appeal and mathematical properties.
what storage media uses laser beams to create three-dimension storage image
It is a regular tessellation.
A regular tessellation.
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a tessellation that uses more than one type of regular polygon
A regular tessellation uses only one regular polygon. A semi-regular tessellation is based on two or more regular polygons.
If it also covers a surface without overlap, then it is a regular tessellation.
A tessellation that uses more than one kind of regular polygon is called a semi-regular tessellation.
No, a regular tessellation uses multiple copies of only one regular polygon.
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