polygon
Good Luck with
regular
true.. and polygon
-- The amount of paper you'd have if you cut the figure out. -- The amount of carpet you need to completely cover the figure.
No, it is using multiple copies of a shape, usually polygons, so as to cover a plane without gaps or overlaps.
the answer is (area)
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regular
true.. and polygon
It is a regular tessellation.
If it also covers a surface without overlap, then it is a regular tessellation.
A regular tessellation.
No, a regular tessellation uses multiple copies of only one regular polygon.
No. Four regular polygons cannot be combined for this purpose.
Three rules for tessellation are: first, the shapes must fit together without any gaps or overlaps; second, the tiles can be regular or irregular, but they should cover a surface completely; and third, the arrangement of shapes can be repeated in a pattern, creating a continuous design. These rules ensure that the tessellation maintains a coherent structure across the entire surface.
I think it's only 3: triangle, square and hexagon.
A tessellation is a method for using copies of a single shape to cover a plane surface without gaps or overlaps. Semi-regular tessellations use two (or more) shapes.
An equilateral triangle can form a regular tessellation. This is because the angles of an equilateral triangle (60 degrees each) perfectly fit together without any gaps when repeated in a plane. When placed edge to edge, these triangles can cover a surface completely, creating a uniform pattern. Other types of triangles do not have angles that can uniformly tessellate a plane.