Concept information
Preferred term
isotoxal figure
Definition
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In geometry, a polytope (for example, a polygon or a polyhedron) or a tiling is isotoxal (from Greek τόξον 'arc') or edge-transitive if its symmetries act transitively on its edges. Informally, this means that there is only one type of edge to the object: given two edges, there is a translation, rotation, and/or reflection that will move one edge to the other while leaving the region occupied by the object unchanged.
(Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isotoxal_figure)
Broader concept
In other languages
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French
URI
http://data.loterre.fr/ark:/67375/PSR-ZK2ZDCNS-F
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