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  2. Grid plan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grid_plan

    A grid plan from 1799 of Pori, Finland, by Isaac Tillberg. The city of Adelaide, South Australia was laid out in a grid, surrounded by gardens and parks. In urban planning, the grid plan, grid street plan, or gridiron plan is a type of city plan in which streets run at right angles to each other, forming a grid. [1]

  3. Grid (graphic design) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grid_(graphic_design)

    A grid applied within an image (instead of a page) using additional angular lines to guide proportions. In graphic design, a grid is a structure (usually two-dimensional) made up of a series of intersecting straight (vertical, horizontal, and angular) or curved lines (grid lines) used to structure content.

  4. History of urban planning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_urban_planning

    The big blocks form a gently undulating street pattern, north–south commercial, east–west arranged to catch the sea breeze. This was a simple and efficient manner to modernise the historical fixed grid patterns. A series of shaded boulevards short cuts the system, with some public squares, accessing the sea front.

  5. CSS grid layout - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CSS_grid_layout

    The first comprehensive draft of a grid layout for CSS was created by Phil Cupp at Microsoft in 2011 and implemented in Internet Explorer 10 behind a -ms-vendor prefix.The syntax was restructured and further refined through several iterations in the CSS Working Group, led primarily by Elika Etemad and Tab Atkins Jr.

  6. Overlapping circles grid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Overlapping_circles_grid

    An overlapping circles grid is a geometric pattern of repeating, overlapping circles of an equal radius in two-dimensional space.Commonly, designs are based on circles centered on triangles (with the simple, two circle form named vesica piscis) or on the square lattice pattern of points.

  7. Regular grid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regular_grid

    Example of a regular grid. A regular grid is a tessellation of n-dimensional Euclidean space by congruent parallelotopes (e.g. bricks). [1] Its opposite is irregular grid.. Grids of this type appear on graph paper and may be used in finite element analysis, finite volume methods, finite difference methods, and in general for discretization of parameter spaces.

  8. Grid cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grid_cell

    Grid-cell activity does not require visual input, since grid patterns remain unchanged when all the lights in an environment are turned off. [1] But when visual cues are present they exert strong control over the alignment of the grids: rotating a cue card on the wall of a cylinder causes grid patterns to rotate by the same amount. [1]

  9. Fused grid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fused_grid

    Diagram of a fused grid district showing four neighbourhoods and a mixed use zone. The fused grid is a street network pattern first proposed in 2002 and subsequently applied in Calgary, Alberta (2006) and Stratford, Ontario (2004).