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  2. List of flags by design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_flags_by_design

    This is a list of flags, arranged by design, serving as a navigational aid for identifying a given flag.Uncharged flags are flags that either are solid or contain only rectangles, squares and crosses but no crescents, circles, stars, triangles, maps, flags, coats of arms or other objects or symbols.

  3. Difference of two squares - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Difference_of_two_squares

    Another geometric proof proceeds as follows: We start with the figure shown in the first diagram below, a large square with a smaller square removed from it. The side of the entire square is a, and the side of the small removed square is b. The area of the shaded region is . A cut is made, splitting the region into two rectangular pieces, as ...

  4. Ashlar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashlar

    Dry ashlar masonry laid in parallel courses on an Inca wall at Machu Picchu Ashlar masonry north gable of Banbury Town Hall, Oxfordshire Ashlar polygonal masonry in Cuzco, Peru Quarry-faced red Longmeadow sandstone in random ashlar was specified by architect Henry Hobson Richardson for the North Congregational Church (Springfield, Massachusetts, 1871).

  5. Wallpaper group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wallpaper_group

    For example: If one shifts example B one unit to the right, so that each square covers the square that was originally adjacent to it, then the resulting pattern is exactly the same as the starting pattern. This type of symmetry is called a translation. Examples A and C are similar, except that the smallest possible shifts are in diagonal ...

  6. Check (pattern) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Check_(pattern)

    Check (also checker, Brit: chequer, or dicing) is a pattern of modified stripes consisting of crossed horizontal and vertical lines which form squares.The pattern typically contains two colours where a single checker (that is a single square within the check pattern) is surrounded on all four sides by a checker of a different colour.

  7. Rectangle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rectangle

    This example shows 4 blue edges of the rectangle, and two green diagonals, all being diagonal of the cuboid rectangular faces. In spherical geometry, a spherical rectangle is a figure whose four edges are great circle arcs which meet at equal angles greater than 90°. Opposite arcs are equal in length.

  8. Small Latin squares and quasigroups - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Small_Latin_squares_and...

    Finding a given Latin square's isomorphism class can be a difficult computational problem for squares of large order. To reduce the problem somewhat, a Latin square can always be put into a standard form known as a reduced square. A reduced square has its top row elements written in some natural order for the symbol set (for example, integers ...

  9. Completing the square - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Completing_the_square

    2.1 Background. 2.2 Basic example. ... Animation depicting the process of completing the square. ... This operation is known as completing the square. For example: ...