In geometry, an apeirogonal prism or infinite prism is the arithmetic limit of the family of prisms; it can be considered an infinite polyhedron or a tiling of the plane. It is also called an infinite square prism. Thorold Gosset called it a 2-dimensional semi-check, like a single row of a checkerboard. If the sides are squares, it is a uniform tiling. In general, it can have two sets of alternating congruent rectangles.
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- In geometry, an apeirogonal prism or infinite prism is the arithmetic limit of the family of prisms; it can be considered an infinite polyhedron or a tiling of the plane. It is also called an infinite square prism. Thorold Gosset called it a 2-dimensional semi-check, like a single row of a checkerboard. If the sides are squares, it is a uniform tiling. In general, it can have two sets of alternating congruent rectangles.
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- In geometry, an apeirogonal prism or infinite prism is the arithmetic limit of the family of prisms; it can be considered an infinite polyhedron or a tiling of the plane. It is also called an infinite square prism. Thorold Gosset called it a 2-dimensional semi-check, like a single row of a checkerboard. If the sides are squares, it is a uniform tiling. In general, it can have two sets of alternating congruent rectangles.
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