Jump to content

Talk:Cell-transitivity

Page contents not supported in other languages.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

polyhedron?

[edit]

I don't understand this: (I don't think cell-transitivity can apply to polyhedra, since there's either zero or one cells depending on how you count, AND even so, cell-transitivity doesn't seem to imply any lower transitivity.) Tom Ruen (talk) 20:25, 10 July 2008 (UTC)[reply]

For a polyhedron, cell-transitive is equivalent to being at once vertex-transitive (transitive on 0-cells), edge-transitive (transitive on 1-cells), and face-transitive (transitive on 2-cells).

Poll to delete this page

[edit]

Cell transitivity has almost no published literature. What there is can be covered by other articles such as Honeycomb (geometry) and Polychoron. I think it is not encyclopedic enough to warrant inclusion and vote to delete it. -- Cheers, Steelpillow (Talk) 19:03, 13 July 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Since the article was largely written by me, larged copied from the other -transitive articles, I moved this page as a redirect to isohedral figure subsection with a brief definition. Tom Ruen (talk) 23:25, 13 July 2008 (UTC)[reply]